How to Make Alien Ice

Tricks to produce strange “ordered” ice could reveal new ice forms

Illustration of an alien painting a UFO

Thomas Fuchs

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Most solids owe their solidity to the regular, latticelike arrangements of their molecules and atoms. But in the water ice that falls as snow or crusts over windows on frosty mornings, only the oxygen atoms are orderly; H2O’s two Hs can orient any which way.

Ordered ices, whose hydrogen atoms are neatly organized instead, most likely exist elsewhere in the universe, such as within the high-pressure hearts of gas giants and icy moons. Studying these exotic ices in the laboratory is tricky because they form so slowly. But in experiments with an ice called ice XIV, scientists publishing in PNAS Nexus have discovered tricks for creating ordered ices up to 100 times faster than before—within days rather than years.

“The results are really clear and very, very helpful,” says condensed matter physicist Leonardo del Rosso of the National Research Council (CNR-IFAC) in Florence, Italy, who also studies ordered ice. “This strategy is applied to ice XIV, but you can extend these to other forms of ice—I hope!”


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Ice XIV forms at low temperatures and extreme pressures (about 10 times the pressure at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean’s Mariana Trench), and its molecules form DNA-like double helices. Stranger still, a glacier made of ice XIV, or any ordered ice, wouldn’t flow; instead it would shatter. Study lead author Christina Tonauer, a physical chemist who performed the experiments as a graduate student at the University of Innsbruck in Austria, says she can feel this textural difference when she grinds samples by hand.

Ordered ice forms slowly, even under the right conditions, because hydrogen atoms get stuck and can’t move past one another. This geometric frustration is even worse in ices made of heavy water, whose hydrogen atoms have a neutron as well as a proton—a problem for scientists who use heavy ices in experiments to reveal ice crystals’ precise structures.

The researchers got around this problem by “doping” ice with small amounts of other chemicals to create gaps in the crystal lattice. These defects give hydrogen atoms more wiggle room to rearrange into ordered structures. For heavy ices, the team showed that also introducing just a tiny bit of ordinary water can dramatically boost ordering—a “really innovative” strategy, says crystallographer Kazuki Komatsu of the University of Tokyo.

This new strategy let Tonauer’s team create heavy ice XIV quickly and, because of that speed, about three times more orderly than before. Producing such pure samples, especially from heavy water, could make it easier to discover entirely new kinds of ice and to recognize them out in the universe.

“We were just not able to reach that highly ordered state before,” Tonauer says. “Now we are able to access it in a lab day.”

Elise Cutts is a science writer based in Austria. She has written for Scientific American, Quanta, National Geographic, and other outlets.

More by Elise Cutts
Scientific American Magazine Vol 330 Issue 4This article was originally published with the title “Alien Ice” in Scientific American Magazine Vol. 330 No. 4 (), p. 12
doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0424-12