
Physicists shocked and compressed water inside a diamond anvil with state of the art lasers.
Researchers from Lawrence Livermore National Lab at the University of California carried out a series of "laser-driven shock-compression experiments" and shared their findings in a study published in Nature Physics journal on Monday.
The superionic ice is "a really strange state of matter," the study's lead author Marius Millot told the New York Times. 'Superionic' refers to water that has properties of both solid and liquid, which occurs when water is placed under extreme pressure and heat.
"These are very challenging experiments, so it was really exciting to see that we could learn so much from the data - especially since we spent about two years making the measurements and two more years developing the methods to analyze the data," Millot said.
The ice was created by compressing water between two diamonds at a level of pressure 25,000 times greater than air on Earth. The water turns into a kind of ice called ice VII, which is solid at room temperature, and 60 percent denser than water. The compressed ice was then hit with a laser light, causing intense shockwaves, as well as increasing temperatures to thousands of degrees.
The heat melts the bonds between hydrogen and oxygen atoms, while the high pressure allows for the oxygen atoms (which are heavier than hydrogen) to be kept in a solid stack as the liquid hydrogen ions flow through.














Comment: Also See: