In Situ Raman Study of Liquid Water at High Pressure

被引:9
|
作者
Romanenko, Alexandr V. [1 ,2 ]
Rashchenko, Sergey V. [1 ,2 ]
Goryainov, Sergey V. [1 ]
Likhacheva, Anna Yu [1 ]
Korsakov, Andrey V. [1 ]
机构
[1] RAS, SB, Sobolev Inst Geol & Mineral, 3 Koptyuga Ave, Novosibirsk 630090, Russia
[2] Novosibirsk State Univ, Novosibirsk, Russia
基金
俄罗斯科学基金会;
关键词
Water; H2O; high pressure; diamond anvil cell; Raman spectroscopy; liquid water structure; INTERNAL-PRESSURE; FLUID INCLUSIONS; SPECTRA; BANDS; KBAR; CELL;
D O I
10.1177/0003702817752487
中图分类号
TH7 [仪器、仪表];
学科分类号
0804 ; 080401 ; 081102 ;
摘要
A pressure shift of Raman band of liquid water (H2O) may be an important tool for measuring residual pressures in mineral inclusions, in situ barometry in high-pressure cells, and as an indicator of pressure-induced structural transitions in H2O. However, there was no consensus as to how the broad and asymmetric water Raman band should be quantitatively described, which has led to fundamental inconsistencies between reported data. In order to overcome this issue, we measured Raman spectra of H2O in situ up to 1.2GPa using a diamond anvil cell, and use them to test different approaches proposed for the description of the water Raman band. We found that the most physically meaningful description of water Raman band is the decomposition into a linear background and three Gaussian components, associated with differently H-bonded H2O molecules. Two of these components demonstrate a pronounced anomaly in pressure shift near 0.4GPa, supporting ideas of structural transition in H2O at this pressure. The most convenient approach for pressure calibration is the use of a linear background + one Gaussian decomposition (the pressure can be measured using the formula P (GPa)=-0.0317(3)(G) (cm(-1)), where (G) represents the difference between the position of water Raman band, fitted as a single Gaussian, in measured spectrum and spectrum at ambient pressure).
引用
收藏
页码:847 / 852
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Raman spectroscopic study of cyclopentane at high pressure
    Tkachev, Sergey N.
    Pravica, Michael
    Kim, Eunja
    Weck, Philippe F.
    JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 2009, 130 (20):
  • [42] HIGH PRESSURE RAMAN STUDY OF BeO.
    Kourouklis, G.A.
    Hochheimer, H.D.
    Jayaraman, A.
    Physica B: Physics of Condensed Matter & C: Atomic, Molecular and Plasma Physics, Optics, 1985, 139-140 : 461 - 463
  • [43] High pressure Raman spectroscopic study of BaFCl
    Sundarakanan, B
    Ravindran, TR
    Kesavamoorthy, R
    Satyanarayana, SVM
    SOLID STATE COMMUNICATIONS, 2002, 124 (10-11) : 385 - 389
  • [45] Elastic anomalous behavior of silica glass under high-pressure: In-situ Raman study
    Deschamps, T.
    Martinet, C.
    de Ligny, D.
    Champagnon, B.
    JOURNAL OF NON-CRYSTALLINE SOLIDS, 2009, 355 (18-21) : 1095 - 1098
  • [46] Translational and Rotational Diffusion in Liquid Water at Very High Pressure: A Simulation Study
    Friant-Michel, Pascale
    Wax, Jean-Francois
    Meyer, Nadege
    Xu, Hong
    Millot, Claude
    JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B, 2019, 123 (47): : 10025 - 10035
  • [47] In situ observation of gas hydrate behaviour under high pressure by Raman spectroscopy
    Komai, T
    Kawamura, T
    Kang, S
    Nagashima, K
    Yamamoto, Y
    JOURNAL OF PHYSICS-CONDENSED MATTER, 2002, 14 (44) : 11395 - 11400
  • [48] A Raman spectroscopic method for the determination of high pressure vapour liquid equilibria
    Adami, Renata
    Schuster, Julian
    Liparoti, Sara
    Reverchon, Ernesto
    Leipertz, Alfred
    Braeuer, Andreas
    FLUID PHASE EQUILIBRIA, 2013, 360 : 265 - 273
  • [49] In Situ Raman Cell for High Pressure and Temperature Studies of Metal and Complex Hydrides
    Domenech-Ferrer, Roger
    Ziegs, Frank
    Klod, Sabrina
    Lindemann, Inge
    Voigtlaender, Raf
    Dunsch, Lothar
    Gutfleisch, Oliver
    ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, 2011, 83 (08) : 3199 - 3204
  • [50] RAMAN STUDY OF VIBRATIONAL-RELAXATION IN LIQUID BENZENE-D6 AT HIGH-PRESSURE
    TANABE, K
    JONAS, J
    JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 1977, 67 (09): : 4222 - 4228