• Liquid sulfur changes shape and goes cri

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Wed Aug 19 21:30:32 2020
    Liquid sulfur changes shape and goes critic under pressure

    Date:
    August 19, 2020
    Source:
    European Synchrotron Radiation Facility
    Summary:
    Scientists have found the proof for a liquid-to-liquid transition in
    sulfur and of a new kind of critical point ending this transition.



    FULL STORY ========================================================================== Scientists from the ESRF, together with teams from CEA and CNRS/Sorbonne Universite', have found the proof for a liquid-to-liquid transition in
    sulfur and of a new kind of critical point ending this transition. Their
    work is published in Nature.


    ========================================================================== Everywhere in the environment phase transitions occur constantly. The
    best- known examples of phase transitions are when water changes state
    from solid to liquid or gas to liquid at 0DEGC and 100DEGC, respectively,
    at atmospheric pressure. Despite the prevalence of these events in
    nature, scientists still do not fully understand how these transitions
    take place at the microscopic level.

    Among the many cases of phase transitions, those that involve a
    latent heat and a discontinuous change of density are termed as
    first-order. First-order transitions are very common in the solid
    state, and include for example the one from graphite to diamond, and
    the semiconductor to metal transition in silicon.

    However, for years no one thought there could be any kind of first order transition separating two liquid phases of the same pure and isotropic substance. With the new millennia, things changed. A Nature paper in
    the year 2000 by Y. Katayama et al., from the Japanese synchrotron
    Spring-8, gave evidence of a liquid-to-liquid transition undergone
    in phosphorus. "It was a real breakthrough, as it changed the way
    the liquid state was perceived by the scientific community," explains
    Mohamed Mezouar, scientist in charge of beamline ID27 at the ESRF and corresponding author of the new publication.

    "Today we show the second direct evidence of such a transition in liquid sulfur," adds Mezouar. "We chose sulfur because sulfur and phosphorus
    exhibit important similarities when subjected to high pressures and temperatures," he explains. "Besides, I knew it was a good candidate as
    it already showed an interesting variety of solid forms, either molecular
    or polymeric, crystalline or amorphous." Sulfur is also one of the most important elements, being used in many applications such as rubber tyres, sulfuric acid, fertilizers, etc.

    If scientists have not been able to find proof of other liquid-liquid transition in any other pure and stable liquid since 2000, it is
    because this type of transformation is scarce and poorly understood
    yet. Calculations have predicted transitions to occur in liquid hydrogen, nitrogen and carbon dioxide but at very high pressure and temperature conditions, still difficult to probe.

    The experiments of the current publication took place on ID27, where the
    ESRF team, together with scientists from the CEA and the CNRS/Sorbonne Universite' in Paris, applied pressure to liquid sulfur and observed
    in situ how it evolved at temperatures up to 1000 degrees Celsius and
    pressures up to 20 kilobars.

    "The experiments were challenging because we had to confine liquid sulfur
    and perform in situ quantitative X-ray measurements of high accuracy,"
    explains Laura Henry, PhD student at the time and first author.

    First evidence of a liquid-liquid critical point: the singularity of the transition After finding the evidence for the liquid-liquid transition,
    the team were in for a surprise. Fre'deric Datchi, CNRS research
    director at "Sorbonne Universite'" recalls: "Completely unexpectedly,
    there it was, we found what we know as a 'critical point', a singularity
    where physical properties change drastically." At the critical point,
    the change in density between the two liquids vanishes, thus one may go continuously from one phase to the other.

    However close to it, the system "hesitates" between the two states,
    producing large density fluctuations, a phenomenon known as critical opalescence.

    Supercritical liquids, that is liquids pressurized and heated above the "normal" liquid-gas critical point are heavily used in the chemical
    industry because they are very good solvents. On the other hand, the
    critical point terminating a liquid-liquid transition was to date only
    a theoretical object.

    Its existence in liquid water was conjectured to explain its many physical anomalies, and actively searched for in experiments since the 1990's,
    so far without success.

    This thus constitutes the first experimental evidence of the existence
    of a liquid-liquid critical point in any system so far. As it is located
    in a pressure-temperature domain accessible by experiment, it provides
    a unique opportunity for the study of critical phenomena associated to
    LLTs and has thus a general value beyond the specific sulfur system.

    EBS: taking phase transitions to the next level With the Extremely
    Brilliant Source, the new generation of synchrotron machine of the ESRF, experiments on liquid-liquid transition will go into more depth: the
    increase in photon flux and coherence will allow scientists to track
    very rapid phenomena, and hence observe the fluctuations around the
    critical point.

    "In the larger sense, this research can open doors to understanding the complexity of the liquid state of other important systems such as water," concludes Mezouar.

    Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2p1krs88ipc&feature=emb_logo

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by
    European_Synchrotron_Radiation_Facility. Note: Content may be edited
    for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Laura Henry, Mohamed Mezouar, Gaston Garbarino, David Sifre', Gunnar
    Weck, Fre'de'ric Datchi. Liquid-liquid transition and
    critical point in sulfur. Nature, 2020; 584 (7821): 382 DOI:
    10.1038/s41586-020-2593-1 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/08/200819110906.htm

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