It has been suggested that high-density amorphous (HDA) ice is a structurally arrested form of high-density liquid (HDL) water, while low-density amorphous ice is a structurally arrested form of low-density liquid (LDL) water. Recent experiments and simulations have been interpreted to support the possibility of a second distinct high-density structural state, named very high-density amorphous (VHDA) ice, questioning the LDL-HDL hypothesis. We test this interpretation using extensive computer simulations and find that VHDA is a more stable form of HDA and that, in fact, VHDA should be considered as the amorphous ice of the quenched HDL
Amorphous ices govern a range of cosmological processes and are potentially key materials for explai...
Amorphous ices govern a range of cosmological processes and are potentially key materials for explai...
The high-density (HDA) and the very high-density (VHDA) amorphous forms of ice are studied through c...
First published as an Advance Article on the web High-density amorphous ice (HDA), further densified...
Here we report about the structural evolution during the conversion from high-density amorphous ice...
Water has more than two glassy states, including low-density amorphous (LDA) and high-density amorph...
Water has more than two glassy states, including low-density amorphous (LDA) and high-density amorph...
Water has more than two glassy states, including low-density amorphous (LDA) and high-density amorph...
Water has more than two glassy states, including low-density amorphous (LDA) and high-density amorph...
In this work we study through computer simulations the three known forms of amorphous ice, namely, t...
The origin of water anomalies hides in an experimentally inaccessible region of the phase diagram kn...
The well-known expansion of water on cooling below 277 K is one of several peculiar properties that ...
The structure of very high-density amorphous (VHDA) ice has been modeled by positionally disordering...
The lack of an "isosbestic" point in the oxygen-oxygen atom radial distribution functions (RDFs) for...
Amorphous ices govern a range of cosmological processes and are potentially key materials for explai...
Amorphous ices govern a range of cosmological processes and are potentially key materials for explai...
Amorphous ices govern a range of cosmological processes and are potentially key materials for explai...
The high-density (HDA) and the very high-density (VHDA) amorphous forms of ice are studied through c...
First published as an Advance Article on the web High-density amorphous ice (HDA), further densified...
Here we report about the structural evolution during the conversion from high-density amorphous ice...
Water has more than two glassy states, including low-density amorphous (LDA) and high-density amorph...
Water has more than two glassy states, including low-density amorphous (LDA) and high-density amorph...
Water has more than two glassy states, including low-density amorphous (LDA) and high-density amorph...
Water has more than two glassy states, including low-density amorphous (LDA) and high-density amorph...
In this work we study through computer simulations the three known forms of amorphous ice, namely, t...
The origin of water anomalies hides in an experimentally inaccessible region of the phase diagram kn...
The well-known expansion of water on cooling below 277 K is one of several peculiar properties that ...
The structure of very high-density amorphous (VHDA) ice has been modeled by positionally disordering...
The lack of an "isosbestic" point in the oxygen-oxygen atom radial distribution functions (RDFs) for...
Amorphous ices govern a range of cosmological processes and are potentially key materials for explai...
Amorphous ices govern a range of cosmological processes and are potentially key materials for explai...
Amorphous ices govern a range of cosmological processes and are potentially key materials for explai...
The high-density (HDA) and the very high-density (VHDA) amorphous forms of ice are studied through c...