Quasi-liquid Layers in Grooves of Grain Boundaries
and on Grain Surfaces of Polycrystalline Ice Thin Films
Posted on 2020-10-01 - 12:35
In
nature, a large proportion of ice is present in a polycrystalline
state. Thus, understanding the formation of quasi-liquid layers (QLLs)
on/in polycrystalline ice is indispensable for understanding a wide
variety of natural phenomena. In this study, we observed surfaces
of polycrystalline ice thin films using our advanced optical microscope.
We focused our attention on the macroscopic fluidity of objects observed
on polycrystalline ice surfaces as evidence for the presence of QLLs.
Systematic observations under various temperatures and water vapor
pressures showed that, with increasing temperature, QLLs first appeared
preferentially in grooves of grain boundaries and continued to exist
at −1.9 ± 0.4 °C, irrespective of the water vapor
pressure (even in immediate vicinities of the vapor–ice equilibrium
curve). From this result, we concluded that the QLLs were formed by
melting of grain boundaries to relax lattice mismatches. With a further
increase of temperature, droplet-type QLLs appeared on grain surfaces
at −0.7 ± 0.2 °C. However, as time elapsed, the droplet-type
QLLs on the grain surfaces spontaneously disappeared within 5 ±
3 min even though temperature and water vapor pressure were kept constant.
Such appearance and subsequent disappearance of the droplet-type QLLs
on the grain surfaces were observed even under relatively highly supersaturated
and undersaturated conditions.
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Chen, Jialu; Maki, Takao; Nagashima, Ken; Murata, Ken-ichiro; Sazaki, Gen (2020). Quasi-liquid Layers in Grooves of Grain Boundaries
and on Grain Surfaces of Polycrystalline Ice Thin Films. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.cgd.0c00799