Shrinking of Rapidly Evaporating Water Microdroplets Reveals their Extreme Supercooling - Archive ouverte HAL Accéder directement au contenu
Article Dans Une Revue Physical Review Letters Année : 2018

Shrinking of Rapidly Evaporating Water Microdroplets Reveals their Extreme Supercooling

Résumé

The fast evaporative cooling of micrometer-sized water droplets in a vacuum offers the appealing possibility to investigate supercooled water—below the melting point but still a liquid—at temperatures far beyond the state of the art. However, it is challenging to obtain a reliable value of the droplet temperature under such extreme experimental conditions. Here, the observation of morphology-dependent resonances in the Raman scattering from a train of perfectly uniform water droplets allows us to measure the variation in droplet size resulting from evaporative mass losses with an absolute precision of better than 0.2%. This finding proves crucial to an unambiguous determination of the droplet temperature. In particular, we find that a fraction of water droplets with an initial diameter of 6379±12  nm remain liquid down to 230.6±0.6  K. Our results question temperature estimates reported recently for larger supercooled water droplets and provide valuable information on the hydrogen-bond network in liquid water in the hard-to-access deeply supercooled regime.
Fichier principal
Vignette du fichier
Shrinking.pdf (627.68 Ko) Télécharger le fichier
Origine : Fichiers éditeurs autorisés sur une archive ouverte

Dates et versions

hal-02285747 , version 1 (11-02-2021)

Identifiants

Citer

Claudia Goy, Marco A. C. Potenza, Sebastian Dedera, Marilena Tomut, Emmanuel Guillerm, et al.. Shrinking of Rapidly Evaporating Water Microdroplets Reveals their Extreme Supercooling. Physical Review Letters, 2018, 120 (1), pp.015501. ⟨10.1103/PhysRevLett.120.015501⟩. ⟨hal-02285747⟩
43 Consultations
33 Téléchargements

Altmetric

Partager

Gmail Facebook X LinkedIn More