Water is one
of the relatively few compounds in which the solid is less dense than the
liquid. That, of course, is why ice floats in your glass. But not all ice is
created equal. Researchers today unveiled a new solid phase of ice that’s the
lowest density version known. Known as ice XVI, the 17th solid phase of ice
discovered to date, it has a cage like structure that can trap other molecules
(green and gray above).
Such ice cages, known as clathrate,
are known to store enormous quantities of methane on the deep ocean floor. The
new clathrate, by contrast, is empty, though it didn’t start that way. The cage
like structure originally formed surrounding neon atoms (blue). The neon was
then leached out of the clathrate through rings of water molecules (red dashed
lines).
The new form of ice may help
researchers better understand clathrate in general, and perhaps ease the flow
of oil and gas through pipelines at low temperatures.
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