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Incipient ferroelectricity of water molecules confined to nano-channels of beryl

Authors :
L. S. Kadyrov
Tetyana Ostapchuk
Martin Dressel
Vladimir S. Gorelik
Jan Prokleška
Elena S. Zhukova
Jan Petzelt
P. V. Tomas
R. K. Kremer
Victor I. Torgashev
Boris Gorshunov
Vladimir V. Uskov
Victor G. Thomas
Christelle Kadlec
G. S. Shakurov
M. A. Belyanchikov
A. S. Prokhorov
Efim V. Pestrjakov
Dmitry A. Fursenko
Maxim Savinov
Filip Kadlec
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 7, Iss 1, Pp 1-10 (2016), Nature Communications
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2016.

Abstract

Water is characterized by large molecular electric dipole moments and strong interactions between molecules; however, hydrogen bonds screen the dipole–dipole coupling and suppress the ferroelectric order. The situation changes drastically when water is confined: in this case ordering of the molecular dipoles has been predicted, but never unambiguously detected experimentally. In the present study we place separate H2O molecules in the structural channels of a beryl single crystal so that they are located far enough to prevent hydrogen bonding, but close enough to keep the dipole–dipole interaction, resulting in incipient ferroelectricity in the water molecular subsystem. We observe a ferroelectric soft mode that causes Curie–Weiss behaviour of the static permittivity, which saturates below 10 K due to quantum fluctuations. The ferroelectricity of water molecules may play a key role in the functioning of biological systems and find applications in fuel and memory cells, light emitters and other nanoscale electronic devices.<br />Ferroelectric orders hardly exist in liquid or ice state of water, despite its enormous molecular electrical polarizability. Here, Gorshunov et al. report incipient ferroelectricity in chains of interacting water molecules by placing them in the structural channels of a beryl crystal.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
7
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1801cd5e5ede2215b31a7ae8003f1d0c