4.7 Article

Analysis of inelastic x-ray scattering spectra of low-temperature water

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PHYSICAL REVIEW E
卷 61, 期 2, 页码 1518-1526

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AMERICAN PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevE.61.1518

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We analyze a set of high-resolution inelastic x-ray scattering (UCS) spectra from H2O measured at T = 259, 273, and 294 K using two different phenomenological models. Model I, called the dynamic cage model, combines the short time in-cage dynamics described by a,a generalized Enskog kinetic theory with a long-time cage relaxation dynamics described by an alpha relaxation. This model is appropriate for supercooled water where the cage effect is dominant and the existence of an alpha relaxation is evident from molecular-dynamics (MD) simulation data of extended simple point charge (SPC/E) model water. Model II is essentially a generalized hydrodynamic theory called the three effective eigenmode theory by de Schepper et al. [1]. This model is appropriate far normal liquid water where the cage effect is less prominent and there is no evidence of the alpha relaxation from the MD data. We use the model I to analyze IXS data at T = 259 K (supercooled water). We successfully extract the Debye-Waller factor, the cage relaxation time from the long-time dynamics, and the dispersion relation of high-frequency sound from the short time dynamics. We then use the model II to analyze IXS data at all three temperatures, from which we are able to extract the relaxation rate of the central mode and the damping of the sound mode as well as the dispersion relation for the high-frequency sound. It turns out that the dispersion relations extracted from the two models at their respective temperatures agree with each other giving the high-frequency sound speed of 2900 +/- 300 m/s. This is to be compared with a slightly higher value reported previously, 3200 +/- 320 m/s, by analyzing similar IXS data with a phenomenological-damped harmonic oscillator model [2]. This latter model has traditionally been used exclusively for the analysis of inelastic scattering spectra of water. The k-dependent sound damping and central mode relaxation rate extracted from our model analyses are compared with the known values in the hydrody- namic limit.

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