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Pressure Effects in Supercooled Water: Comparison between a 2D Model of Water and Experiments for Surface Water on a Protein

Abstract

Experiments in bulk water confirm the existence of two local arrangements of water molecules with different densities, but, because of inevitable freezing at low temperature TT, can not ascertain whether the two arrangements separate in two phases. To avoid the freezing, new experiments measure the dynamics of water at low TT on the surface of proteins, finding a crossover from a non-Arrhenius regime at high TT to a regime that is approximately Arrhenius at low TT. Motivated by these experiments, Kumar et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 100, 105701 (2008)] investigated, by Monte Carlo simulations and mean field calculations, the relation of the dynamic crossover with the coexistence of two liquid phases in a cell model for water and predict that: (i) the dynamic crossover is isochronic, i.e. the value of the crossover time τL\tau_{\rm L} is approximately independent of pressure PP; (ii) the Arrhenius activation energy EA(P)E_{\rm A}(P) of the low-TT regime decreases upon increasing PP; (iii) the temperature T(P)T^*(P) at which τ\tau reaches a fixed macroscopic time ττL\tau^*\geq \tau_{\rm L} decreases upon increasing PP; in particular, this is true also for the crossover temperature TL(P)T_{\rm L}(P) at which τ=τL\tau=\tau_{\rm L}. Here, we compare these predictions with recent quasi elastic neutron scattering (QENS) experiments performed by X.-Q. Chu {\it et al.} on hydrated proteins at different values of PP. We find that the experiments are consistent with these three predictions.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures, to appear on J. Phys.: Cond. Ma

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