Excess Hydrogen Bond at the Ice-Vapor Interface around 200 K

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DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.119.133003
Reference W.J. Smit, F. Tang, M.A. Sanchez, E.H.G. Backus, L. Xu, T. Hasegawa, M. Bonn, H.J. Bakker and Y. Nagata, Excess Hydrogen Bond at the Ice-Vapor Interface around 200 K, Phys.Rev.Lett. 119, (Article number: 133003), 1-5 (2017)
Group Ultrafast Spectroscopy

Phase-resolved sum-frequency generation measurements combined with molecular dynamics simu-
lations are employed to study the effect of temperature on the molecular arrangement of water on the basal face of ice. The topmost monolayer, interrogated through its nonhydrogen-bonded, free O-H stretch peak, exhibits a maximum in surface H-bond density around 200 K. This maximum results from two competing effects: above 200 K, thermal fluctuations cause the breaking of H bonds; below 200 K, the formation of bulklike crystalline interfacial structures leads to H-bond breaking. Knowledge of the surface structure of ice is critical for understanding reactions occurring on ice surfaces and ice nucleation.