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”The Physics and Chemistry of Water” 4 – Thermodynamic and dielectric properties • Extensively studied, particularly to generate steam tables for power generation. • Properties characterized from 2 to 2000 K, and up to 400000 atm. • Water is easily supercooled (to -90 ◦C). Plenty of data available on liquid water < 0 ◦C. • ”Anomalies” in the thermodynamic properties can be understood in terms of H-bond structural changes (surprise, surprise). • H2O does not make ideal solutions, not even H2O/D2O mixtures behave ideally. • Comparing with other group 6 hydrides, melting points, boiling points and critical points are over 100 K higher than expected by extrapolation. The ice-liquid-vapour triple point P-T diagram for H2 O. The triple point is at 0.01 ◦ C, and 4.58 mm Hg, or 610 Pa. (From Eisenberg) Volume per gram at the triple point Water 1.00 Ice 1.09 Vapour 206000 The critical point P-V diagram for H2 O near the critical point (From Eisenberg) Critical constants (From Robinson) Temperature, Tc Pressure, Pc Volume Vc (K) (MPa) (cm3 /mol) H2 O 647.096 22.064 55.95 D2 O 643.89 21.671 56.22 Some notes: a) Vc is only 3 times the volume of the liquid at the triple point, while the vapour density increases a factor of 60000 in going from the triple point to the critical point. b) Tc for D2O is lower than for H2O, although the melting point, boiling point and all triple points of the D2O phase diagram are higher than those for H2O. c) The triple, melting and boiling points of D2O are higher due to smaller zero-point energy; D2O must absorb more thermal energy than H2O to melt. d) Eight triple points are known for water; four ice-liquid-ice, and three ice-ice-ice types. e) The critical point for water is over 250 K higher than expected by extrapolation: Thermal energy Enthalpy (kcal mol−1 ), entropy (2 cal mol−1 ◦ C−1 ), free energy (kcal mol−1 ) and heat capacity (cal mol−1 ◦ C−1 ) of H2 O at 1 atm (From Eisenberg.) Thermodynamic constants for phase changes Phase changes of water at 1 atm Fusion Vaporization T (K) 273.15 373.15 ∆Cp (J/mol · K) 37.284 -41.928 ∆H (kJ/mol) 6.0095 40.656 ∆S (J/mol · K) 22.000 108.951 ∆E (kJ/mol) 6.0095 37.606 3 −1 ∆V (cm mol ) -1.62 3.01 × 104 Sublimation At ice I-liquid-vapour At 0 K to the triple point ideal vapour T (K) 273.15 0 ∆H (kJ/mol) 51.01 47.40 ∆S (J/mol · K) 187.05 0 ∆E (kJ/mol) 48.82 47.31 • Smaller changes in ∆H, ∆S and ∆E for fusion than for vaporization reflect H-bond changes...! • The enthalpy of sublimation at 0 K is a direct measure of the intermolecular energy in ice. • The heat of vaporization is more than twice that of e.g. H2S, since there is considerable hydrogen bonding in H2O at 100 ◦C (∼ 75%), and almost all these have to be broken. Increased hydrogen bonding causes higher heat of vaporization at lower temperatures (10% increase at 0 ◦C). The heat capacity of liquid water is about twice that of ice or steam (From Ben-Naim) Origin of the heat capacity of ice • Intramolecular vibrations are hardly excited at room temperature, and only intermolecular vibrations, hindered translations and hindered rotations (librations) contribute. • As ice is heated from 0 K, the translations (∼ 200 cm−1) are excited before the rotations (∼ 500-800 cm−1). Below 80 K virtually only hindered translations contribute. Contributions to the heat capacity of liquid water When the structure of a phase changes with T , a configurational contribution to thermal properties has to be considered. Upon heating, water changes structure, i.e. the average relative positions are changing, and thus also the potential energy associated with the intermolecular interactions. In ice only the average displacements within the same structure increases. O–O pair correlations for water (Adapted from Narten). Thus, we may separate the configurational contribution from that originating in mechanical degrees of freedom; Cv (observed) = Cv (conf ig.) + Cv (vibrational) Separation of the experimental heat capacity of H2 O into vibrational and configuration contributions (From Eisenberg). In liquid water, the excitation of vibrations accounts for about half of the measured heat capacity, and the remaining configurational contribution is associated with the distortion and breaking of hydrogen bonds. The energy absorbed in these processes is not available to increase the kinetic energy of water, and relatively much heat is required to raise the temperature. In steam, virtually all intermolecular contributions are lost, reducing the heat capacity to below that of ice. Anomalies in P–V–T relations Such as... • The minimum in Cp at 36 ◦C. • The minimum in isothermal compressibility. (From Eisenberg) • The low thermal expansivity • The density maximum ...can generally be understood in terms of two competing effects as water is heated: (1) The open tetrahedral structure breaks down (configurational contribution) (2) Intermolecular vibrations increase in amplitude, enlarging the volume (vibrational contribution) These effects can also be described very elaborately (and quantitatively) in terms of large Hbonded clusters, see Chaplins website for details! http://www.lsbu.ac.uk/water/clusters.html The density maximum (From Eisenberg) Note that the decrease in volume between 0 and 4 ◦C is only 0.013 % of the volume at 4 ◦C, and 0.13 % of the increase from 4 to 100 ◦C. The effect of pressure on viscosity Viscosity of water from 2 to 100 ◦ C. The initial decrease at low T is caused by a weakening of the H-bond structure, which makes flow easier. As T increases, this effect is compensated by the reduction in the available volume per molecule (From Bett & Cappi, Nature 207, 620 (1965))). O–O pair correlation functions for pressures up to 7.7 kbar (left), and pressure dependence on nearest-neighbour separations (right), indicating a structural change with pressure, and also that the nearest-neighbour separation changes very little (From Okhulkov, J. Chem. Phys. 100, 1578 (1994))). Dielectric constants of ice and water Ice T (K) P(kbar) ² ²∞ Ih 250 0 97.5 3.1 II 243 2.3 3.66 3.66 III 243 2.3 117 4.1 V 243 5 144 4.6 VI 243 8 193 5.1 IX 173 2.3 3.74 3.74 Liquid 273 0 87.7 1.77 Remember: Ice III and ice IX have the same structure, but IX is proton ordered, as is ice II. The large dielectric constants for disordered ices suggests that water molecules in these polymorphs constantly change their orientation due to thermal agitation. (From Israelachvili) Dipolar orientation Approximate dipole moments (D) Ice 2.6 Water 2.4 Vapour 1.85 The tetrahedral structure leads to... • ...large dipole moments in each molecule. Compared to a free molecule, each molecule is further polarized by the fields from its strongly polar neighbours. • ...a strong angular correlation between molecular dipole moments, meaning that when one molecule is aligned with an external field, its neighbours tend to be aligned also. The inreasing permittivity of ices at higher pressures is caused by the greater density, resulting in more dipoles per unit volume, and larger values of the molecular dipole moments. The angular correlation is thought to change little with the density. Stillinger (J. Chem. Phys., 58, 2532 (1973)): Interaction between neighbours alone in ice would seem to favour antiparallel arrangement of water molecular dipoles over parallel...? Dipolar orientation - quantitatively In a first approximation, Kirkwood theory can be implemented (in the absence of external fields); ² = 2πN m̄ · m̄∗ kT where N is the number density of molecules, m̄(= µ̄ + αF̄ ) the average dipole moment of a molecule surrounded by its neighbours, m∗ the vector sum of the dipole moment of a molecule and its neighbours. The angular correlation can be described by the Kirkwood correlation parameter g= m̄ · m̄∗ |m̄|2 =1+ X Ni hcos γi i Here Ni is the number of molecules in the ith coordination shell, and hcos γi i the average cosine of angles formed by the dipole moments of molecules in the ith shell with the dipole moment of the central molecule. Combining these, we obtain |m̄|2 g ² = 2πN kT This means that ² depends not only on the permanent dipole, but also on the dipole density and their tendency to align each other. So, in ice, increasing pressure increases m̄ while g remains largely unchanged. Frequency-dependent permittivity ²(ω) (From Israelachvili) ²(ω) of water can be represented as a Debye relaxation in the microwave region, added to damped harmonic oscillators in the IR and UV, e.g.: ε(iξ) = 1 + d 1 + ξτ + 11 X fj 2 2 j=1 ωj + ξ + gj ξ (1) For the Debye relaxation d = 74.8 and 1/τ = 6.5 × 10−5 eV. Parameters for five IR and six UV terms are listed below. This representation is simple, and agrees with calculations using spectral data. ωj (eV) 2.07×10−2 6.9×10−2 9.2×10−2 2.0×10−1 4.2×10−1 fj (eV2 ) Infrared 6.25×10−4 3.50×10−3 1.28×10−3 5.54×10−4 1.35×10−2 gj (eV) 1.5×10−2 3.8×10−2 2.8×10−2 2.5×10−2 5.6×10−2 ωj fj gj 2 (eV) (eV ) (eV) Ultraviolet 8.21 3.26 0.63 10.0 3.87 0.84 11.4 12.0 2.05 13.6 63.6 3.90 17.8 114.0 7.33 25.2 24.3 5.43 (From Ederth, Langmuir 17, 3329 (2001)) Summary Compared to other substances, liquid water seems in many ways unusual and mysterious. However, the unusual features can be understood in terms of the properties of water at the molecular level, in particular the strong association. Thus, water obeys well known laws for molecular interactions and is not anomalous, but perhaps rather unusual. General references • G. Wilse Robinson et al., Water in biology, chemistry and physics, Singapore: World Scientific 1996. • D. Eisenberg and W. Kauzmann, The structure and properties of water, Oxford: OUP 1969. • A. Ben-Naim, Water and aqueous solutions, New York: Plenum 1974. • F. Franks, Water: a matrix of life, 2nd ed., Cambridge: Royal Society of Chemistry 2000. • Website by M. Chaplin, London South Bank University, http://www.lsbu.ac.uk/water/index.html. An extensive site explaining many properties of water. • J. N. Israelachvili, Intermolecular and surface forces, London: Academic Press 1992.