РОССИЙСКАЯ АКАДЕМИЯ НАУК УРАЛЬСКОЕ ОТДЕЛЕНИЕ ИНСТИТУТ ХИМИИ TBEPДОГО ТЕЛА |
|
|
11.02.2011 | Карта сайта Language |
|
Fortes decided to study the icy compound methanol monohydrate (a 1:1 methanol and water mixture) because scientists infer that the ice on moons will also have methanol present. This is because interstellar ice and comets, the leftovers of planet formation, contain small molecules like methanol. After determining the crystal structure of his material, Fortes studied its properties as a function of temperature and pressure. 'Having measured the thermal expansion first, I then suspected that one direction in the crystal would be incredibly squashy, but I thought that this would result in a phase transition to another polymorph [a different crystal arrangement of the molecules] at relatively low pressures,' says Fortes. 'I did not predict the negative linear compressability.' Fortes suggests that this negative linear compressability (NLT), the phenomenon of expansion under mechanical pressure, is because the methanol monohydrate crystal lattice is ordered like a collapsible wine rack - if you push down on the hinged points the lattice pushes outwards. This isn't the first substance that displays both NLT and negative thermal expansion (NTE) says Arnaud Marmier of the University of Exeter, UK, who studies these properties and describes them as 'weird, and quite fascinating'. Marmier doesn't expect the ice to be used in materials applications itself because it's too soft, but Fortes says he would be 'delighted if material scientists took up this material for further investigation'. For Fortes though, 'the nitty-gritty of NLC and NTE are a bit of side-show from the planetary work', which he now plans to continue with more high pressure studies of his interstellar ices. 'I'm not going to predict what I might find,' he concludes, 'nature always makes up its own mind.' Laura Howes
Interesting? Spread the word using the 'tools' menu on the left. ReferencesA D Fortes et al, Science, 2011, 331,742 (DOI: 10.1126/science.1198640
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||