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Transition from one-dimensional water to ferroelectric ice within a supramolecular architecture.


ABSTRACT: Ferroelectric materials are characterized by spontaneous electric polarization that can be reversed by inverting an external electric field. Owing to their unique properties, ferroelectric materials have found broad applications in microelectronics, computers, and transducers. Water molecules are dipolar and thus ferroelectric alignment of water molecules is conceivable when water freezes into special forms of ice. Although the ferroelectric ice XI has been proposed to exist on Uranus, Neptune, or Pluto, evidence of a fully proton-ordered ferroelectric ice is still elusive. To date, existence of ferroelectric ice with partial ferroelectric alignment has been demonstrated only in thin films of ice grown on platinum surfaces or within microdomains of alkali-hydroxide doped ice I. Here we report a unique structure of quasi-one-dimensional (H(2)O)(12n) wire confined to a 3D supramolecular architecture of H(4)CDTA, trans-1,2-diaminocyclohexane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid; 4,4'-bpy, 4,4'-bipyridine). In stark contrast to the bulk, this 1D water wire not only exhibits enormous dielectric anomalies at approximately 175 and 277 K, respectively, but also undergoes a spontaneous transition between "1D liquid" and "1D ferroelectric ice" at approximately 277 K. Hitherto unrevealed properties of the 1D water wire will be valuable to the understanding of anomalous properties of water and synthesis of novel ferroelectric materials.

SUBMITTER: Zhao HX 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3048133 | biostudies-literature | 2011 Mar

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Transition from one-dimensional water to ferroelectric ice within a supramolecular architecture.

Zhao Hai-Xia HX   Kong Xiang-Jian XJ   Li Hui H   Jin Yi-Chang YC   Long La-Sheng LS   Zeng Xiao Cheng XC   Huang Rong-Bin RB   Zheng Lan-Sun LS  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20110214 9


Ferroelectric materials are characterized by spontaneous electric polarization that can be reversed by inverting an external electric field. Owing to their unique properties, ferroelectric materials have found broad applications in microelectronics, computers, and transducers. Water molecules are dipolar and thus ferroelectric alignment of water molecules is conceivable when water freezes into special forms of ice. Although the ferroelectric ice XI has been proposed to exist on Uranus, Neptune,  ...[more]

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