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Protons and the Floating Water Bridge 11 th International Conference on the Physics, Chemistry and Biology of Water Elmar C. Fuchs
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Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

Mar 24, 2022

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Page 1: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

Protons and the Floating Water Bridge11th International Conference on the Physics, Chemistry and Biology of Water

Elmar C. Fuchs

Page 2: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

High Voltage and Water

Page 3: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

High Voltage and WaterHigh Voltage and Water

Page 4: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

Sir William George Armstrong, 1st Baron Armstrong * November 26, 1810 † December 27, 1900

Armstrong, William George, "Electrical Phenomena", in: THE ELECTRICAL ENGINEER, Feb 10 (1893) p154-155

Electrohydrodynamic liquid bridge

Page 5: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

Bridge Formation

Visualisation:Photron SA1 High

Speed Camera (B/W). Slow Motion

Factor 120.

slow motion

Page 6: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

Visualisation:Panasonic Digital

Camcorder,real time.

Bridge Expansionreal time

Page 7: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

Thermography

Visualisation: Equus 110L (IRCAM)

338 frames / s

bright: ~40°C

Page 8: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

High Speed Thermography

Visualisation: Equus 110L (IRCAM); bright: ~40°C

Page 9: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

Current simulation

Page 10: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

Electric field simulationElectric displacement

Page 11: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

Infrared Emissionwater emission 47°Cwater bridge emission

water emission 37°C

CO2 absorptionH2O vapor absorption

0

2400 2200 2000 1800 1600 1400 1200 1000 800

norm

. em

issi

on [

arb.

uni

ts]

wavenumber [cm]-1

Page 12: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

5µm3µm = 3333 cm -1

12µm8µm

0

2400 2200 2000 1800 1600 1400 1200 1000 800

norm

. em

issi

on [

arb.

uni

ts]

wavenumber [cm]-1

Infrared Emissionwater emission 47°Cwater bridge emission

water emission 37°C

CO2 absorptionH2O vapor absorption

thermographic camera 1

thermographic camera 2

Page 13: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

thermographic camera 1 thermographic camera 2

Infrared Emission

3-5µm region is as bright as 47°C, 8-12µm region as bright as 37°C waterThere is an additional, non-thermic emission at shorter wavelengthsThis emission is interpreted as result from a protonic band transition

E.C. Fuchs, A. Cherukupally, A.H. Paulitsch-Fuchs, L.L.F. Agostinho, A.D. Wexler, J. Woisetschläger and F.T. Freund, Investigation of the Mid-Infrared Emission of a Floating Water Bridge, J. Phys. D: Appl. Phys. 45 (2012) 475401

Page 14: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

Proton production, conduction and reduction

liquid flow gas flow ion flow

Page 15: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

Measurement of the OH-vibration in an HDO moleculeDuration of vibration gives information about the H-bond network

Vibration stops faster in solid phase and last longer in liquid phase

hexagonal ice

liquid water

Ultrafast vibrational energy relaxation

300

400

500

600

700

OH

- st

retc

h vi

brat

iona

l life

time

/ fs

water bridge~ 25°C

ice

liquid water

ice 0°C

liquid water0°C

phase transition

Page 16: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

Proton mobility

S( )water bridgewater in Al cylinder

inte

nsity

/ 10

a.u

.4

/ 10 µeV3

-10 -8 -6 -4 -2 0

3.0

2.5

2.0

1.5

1.0

0.5

0

"Quasi-elastic neutron scattering" - QENS

Page 17: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

QENS data evaluation

/ 10 µeV3

800

-5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0

400inte

nsi

ty /

a.u

.

0

Q = 0.655871Å-1

Instrument resolution ( function, V)

S(Q, )

Lorentzian

Data pointFit: Lorentzian + function (V)

(Q)=DQ²

1+DQ²0

HWHM of the LorentzianRandom jump diffusion model:

Page 18: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

Diffusion coefficient

/ µE

. . . .Q² / Å-

Water i Al li derWater ridge

Water °C si ulatio ith utliple s atteri g orre tio

Water ridge fit

Corre ted ater ridge ur e% o fide e i ter al

Water i Al li der fit

°C si ulatio% o fide e i ter al

Dwb= (26±10)·10-5 cm s-1Dw,50°C= 4.0 ·10-5 cm s-1

0,wb=(0.55±0.08) ps0,w,50°C= 1.00 ps

Page 19: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

Proton mobility

Method to al ulate proto o ility µH / -7 m² V- s-

Stokes – Ei stei Diffusio oeffi ie t fro this easure e t

Te perature depe de t o E-field .

Ostrou o , Stuetzer a d Féli i .Féli i i pro ed ethod .

.

Charge mobility for EHD purposes has been reported "anomalously high"Stokes - Einstein relation allows to calculate proton mobility in the bridge

E. C. Fuchs, B. Bitschnau, A. D. Wexler, J. Woisetschläger, F. Freund, “A Quasi-Elastic Neutron Scattering Study of the Dynamics of Electrically Constrained Water,” J. Phys. Chem. 2015, 119 (52), pp 15892–15900

D=µqkBT

q

Page 20: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

Proton jumps< l a > = D

l (water, 50°C) ~ 1.6 Å nearest neighbor interaction (Grotthuss)

l (wb, 50°C) ~ 3.0 Å next to nearest neighbor interaction

Quasi - free protonsQuantum mechanical interpretation of the Grotthus mechanism"Proton channel": proton conduction band across 3 water molecules"Band structure" is normally associated with a solid materialPhase is deteremined by the intermolecular bond strengths (H-bond)

Page 21: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

Proton production, conduction and reduction

liquid flow gas flow ion flow

M. Sammer, A.D. Wexler, P. Kuntke, H. Wiltsche, N. Stanulewicz, E. Lankmayr, J. Woisetschläger, E.C. Fuchs, J. Phys. D: Appl. Phys 48 (2015) 415501

Page 22: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

EIS of waterE peri e tal data

Fitted data

C

Raq

. E+

. E+

. E+

. E+

. E+

. E+

. E+-I

) /

. E+ . E+ . E+ . E+ . E+ . E+ . E+Re ) /

100 Hz - 107 Hz

E.C. Fuchs, M. Sammer, A.D. Wexler, P. Kuntke, J. Woisetschläger, J. Phys. D: Appl. Phys. 49 (2016) 125502

Page 23: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

EIS of anolyte and catholyte

R1A

R2A

C1A

C2A

R1C

R2C

C1C

L

E peri e tal data a ol teFitted data a ol teE peri e tal data athol teFitted data athol te

. E+. E+ . E+ . E+ . E+ . E+ . E+ . E+

. E+

. E+

. E+

. E+

. E+

. E+

-I)

/

Re ) /

E.C. Fuchs, M. Sammer, A.D. Wexler, P. Kuntke, J. Woisetschläger, J. Phys. D: Appl. Phys. 49 (2016) 125502

Page 24: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

Anolyte

A ol te, easure e t

A ol te, easure e t

A ol te, easure e t

-I)

/

-I)

/

-I)

/

Re ) / Re ) / Re )

H+ + e- 1/2 H2

Reduction destroys charge carriers, the impedance increases with each measurement

Page 25: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

Catholyte

Cathol te, easure e t

Cathol te, easure e t

Cathol te, easure e t

-I)

/

Re ) /

2OH- 1/2 O2 + H2O +2e-

OH- are not present at pH 5.5, so the oxidation "frees" previously occupied protons, thus the impedance decreases with each measurement

Page 26: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

Charged water

H2.00000000045O+ H2O H1.9999999986O

~5mC/L ~5mC/L

Page 27: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

Summary

An aqueous electrohydrodynamic floating bridge (a.k.a. "floating water bridge" -FWB) resembles a protonic resistorThe protonic charge flow heats up the water bridge and can be visualizedProtons are generated by electrolysis in the anolyte and are neutralized in the catholyteThe water in an FWB is in an electrically excited state with increased H-bond strength that lies inside the "no man's land" of the phase transition between ice and liquidIn this excited state protons reveal an increased mobility and travel through "proton channels"If the a FWB is stopped abruptly, excess protonic and aterprotonic charge remain in the water (~5mC/L)

Page 28: Protons and the Floating Water Bridge

Thank you for your attention.

Protons and the Floating Water BridgeElmar C. Fuchs1

With cordial gratitude to those who made this research possible and contributed to it: J. Woisetschläger2, A.D. Wexler1, H. Bakker10, F. Freund3, B. Bitschnau4, J. Teixeira5, A. Soper7, E. Del Giudice8, G. Vitiello9, B. Beuneu5, K. Gatterer4, H. Eisenkölbl4, G. Holler6, J. Tuinstra1, C. Buisman1, the companies in the AWP theme, and many more.

1. Wetsus, Centre of Excellence for Sustainable Water Technology, Agora 1, 8900 CC Leeuwarden, The Netherlands2. Graz University of Technology, Institute for Thermal Turbomachinery and Machine Dynamics, Austria3. NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Mountain View, CA, USA4. Graz University of Technology, Institute of Physical and Theoretical Chemistry, Austria 5. Laboratoire Léon Brillouin, Centre d'Études Nucléaires de Saclay, 91191 Gif-sur-Yvette Cedex, France6. Graz University of Technology, Institute of Electrical Measurement and Measurement Signal Processing, Austria7. ISIS Facility, STFC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, Harwell Science and Innovation Campus, Didcot, Oxon, OX11 0QX, United Kingdon8. Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare, Sezione di Milano, Milano - 20133 Italy9. Dipartimento di Matematica e Informatica and INFN, Universitá di Salerno, Fisciano (SA) - 84084 Italy10. FOM Institute AMOLF, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

http://www.phdpositionswetsus.eu/