Department of Chemistry, The University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112-0850, USA.
Department of Chemical Engineering and Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California, Santa Barbara, California 93106, USA.
Nature. 2017 Nov 8;551(7679):218-222. doi: 10.1038/nature24279.
The freezing of water affects the processes that determine Earth's climate. Therefore, accurate weather and climate forecasts hinge on good predictions of ice nucleation rates. Such rate predictions are based on extrapolations using classical nucleation theory, which assumes that the structure of nanometre-sized ice crystallites corresponds to that of hexagonal ice, the thermodynamically stable form of bulk ice. However, simulations with various water models find that ice nucleated and grown under atmospheric temperatures is at all sizes stacking-disordered, consisting of random sequences of cubic and hexagonal ice layers. This implies that stacking-disordered ice crystallites either are more stable than hexagonal ice crystallites or form because of non-equilibrium dynamical effects. Both scenarios challenge central tenets of classical nucleation theory. Here we use rare-event sampling and free energy calculations with the mW water model to show that the entropy of mixing cubic and hexagonal layers makes stacking-disordered ice the stable phase for crystallites up to a size of at least 100,000 molecules. We find that stacking-disordered critical crystallites at 230 kelvin are about 14 kilojoules per mole of crystallite more stable than hexagonal crystallites, making their ice nucleation rates more than three orders of magnitude higher than predicted by classical nucleation theory. This effect on nucleation rates is temperature dependent, being the most pronounced at the warmest conditions, and should affect the modelling of cloud formation and ice particle numbers, which are very sensitive to the temperature dependence of ice nucleation rates. We conclude that classical nucleation theory needs to be corrected to include the dependence of the crystallization driving force on the size of the ice crystallite when interpreting and extrapolating ice nucleation rates from experimental laboratory conditions to the temperatures that occur in clouds.
水的冻结会影响决定地球气候的过程。因此,准确的天气预报和气候预测取决于对冰成核率的良好预测。这些速率预测是基于使用经典成核理论进行外推的,该理论假设纳米级冰晶的结构与六方冰的结构相对应,六方冰是体相冰的热力学稳定形式。然而,使用各种水模型进行的模拟发现,在大气温度下成核和生长的冰在所有尺寸上都是无序堆积的,由立方和六方冰层的随机序列组成。这意味着无序堆积的冰晶要么比六方冰晶更稳定,要么是由于非平衡动力学效应而形成的。这两种情况都对经典成核理论的核心原则提出了挑战。在这里,我们使用罕见事件采样和 mW 水模型的自由能计算来表明,混合立方和六方层的熵使得无序堆积的冰成为至少 100000 个分子大小的晶核的稳定相。我们发现,在 230 开尔文下,无序堆积的临界晶核比六方晶核稳定约 14 千焦/摩尔,使得它们的成核率比经典成核理论预测的高出三个数量级以上。这种对成核率的影响是温度依赖的,在最温暖的条件下最为明显,并且应该影响云形成和冰粒子数的建模,这些模型对冰成核率的温度依赖性非常敏感。我们得出结论,在从实验实验室条件推断和外推冰成核率到云出现的温度时,经典成核理论需要进行修正,以包括结晶驱动力对冰晶大小的依赖性。