- May 15, 2015
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The Mpemba effect is the idea that hot water freezes faster than cold water. WHAAAA!?!? What witchcraft is this you say. And many scientists would agree. But many would also disagree. It seems that either proving or disproving the effect has been a notoriously difficult thing to do. But so has explaining it if it is in fact real.
https://www.sciencenews.org/article/debate-heats-over-claims-hot-water-sometimes-freezes-faster-cold
In a paper published online December 6 in Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation, scientists propose that hydrogen bonds, the links formed between hydrogen atoms and the oxygen atoms of neighboring water molecules, could be part of the puzzle. Dieter Cremer of Southern Methodist University in Dallas and colleagues studied the strengths of hydrogen bonds in simulations of clusters of water molecules. “We see that hydrogen bonds change when warming up water,” says Cremer. The strength of hydrogen bonds depends on the arrangements of nearby water molecules. In simulations of cold water, both weak and strong hydrogen bonds were observed, but in higher temperature simulations, a larger percentage of the hydrogen bonds were strong, because “the weaker ones are broken to a large extent,” Cremer says.
Cremer and colleagues realized their new understanding of hydrogen bonds could explain the Mpemba effect. As water is heated, weaker bonds break, and groups of molecules form into fragments that can realign to form the crystalline structure of ice, serving as a starting point for the freezing process. For cold water to rearrange in this way, weak hydrogen bonds first have to be broken.
https://www.sciencenews.org/article/debate-heats-over-claims-hot-water-sometimes-freezes-faster-cold
