4.7 Review

The physics of empty liquids: from patchy particles to water

Journal

REPORTS ON PROGRESS IN PHYSICS
Volume 85, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1361-6633/ac42d9

Keywords

empty liquids; supercooled water; liquid-liquid transition; patchy particles

Funding

  1. European Research Council [DLV-759187]
  2. MIUR-PRIN [2017Z55KCW]
  3. STFC Hartree Centre's Innovation Return on Research programme - Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy

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This study focuses on the connections between empty liquids, patchy particles, and water. It highlights the modeling principles that allow an empty liquid to behave like water, including factors such as the appearance of thermodynamic and dynamic anomalies, the possibility of liquid-liquid phase transitions, and the crystallization of open crystalline structures.
Empty liquids represent a wide class of materials whose constituents arrange in a random network through reversible bonds. Many key insights on the physical properties of empty liquids have originated almost independently from the study of colloidal patchy particles on one side, and a large body of theoretical and experimental research on water on the other side. Patchy particles represent a family of coarse-grained potentials that allows for a precise control of both the geometric and the energetic aspects of bonding, while water has arguably the most complex phase diagram of any pure substance, and a puzzling amorphous phase behavior. It was only recently that the exchange of ideas from both fields has made it possible to solve long-standing problems and shed new light on the behavior of empty liquids. Here we highlight the connections between patchy particles and water, focusing on the modelling principles that make an empty liquid behave like water, including the factors that control the appearance of thermodynamic and dynamic anomalies, the possibility of liquid-liquid phase transitions, and the crystallization of open crystalline structures.

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