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arxiv: 1907.09598 · v1 · pith:BBEMAHDVnew · submitted 2019-07-22 · ⚛️ physics.chem-ph

Gibbs energy of ices III, V and VI: wholistic thermodynamics and elasticity of the water phase diagram to 2300 MPa

Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 17:22 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification ⚛️ physics.chem-ph
keywords Gibbs energyice phaseshigh pressurethermodynamicswater phase diagramvolume measurementsvibrational energiesplanetary hydrospheres
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The pith

Gibbs energy representations for ices III, V and VI complete the thermodynamic model of water phases up to 2300 MPa.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper constructs Gibbs energy functions for ice phases III, V and VI from new high-pressure volume measurements at low temperatures combined with vibrational energies from statistical physics. When added to existing representations for ice Ih and liquid water, these functions support direct calculation of phase boundaries, densities, heat capacities, bulk moduli, thermal expansivities, chemical potentials and seismic velocities across 220 to 500 K and pressures to 2300 MPa. A sympathetic reader would care because the single consistent set of functions removes the need for separate empirical adjustments when modeling water behavior under conditions found in planetary hydrospheres.

Core claim

Gibbs energy representations for ice III, V and VI are reported. These were constructed using new measurements of volumes at high pressure over a range of low temperatures combined with calculated vibrational energies grounded in statistical physics. The collection of representations allow accurate determinations of thermodynamics properties (phase boundaries, density, heat capacity, bulk modulus, thermal expansivity, chemical potentials) and seismic wave velocities over the entire range of conditions encountered in hydrospheres in our solar system (220 - 500K to 2300 MPa).

What carries the argument

Gibbs energy representations for each ice phase, built from measured volumes and calculated vibrational energies, from which all other thermodynamic and elastic quantities are derived by differentiation.

If this is right

  • Phase boundaries between the ices and liquid water follow directly from equality of the Gibbs energies.
  • Densities, heat capacities, thermal expansivities and bulk moduli become available as continuous functions of pressure and temperature.
  • Seismic wave velocities can be computed for any point in the stated range using the elastic properties derived from the same functions.
  • Chemical potentials of the phases are obtained without additional fitting, enabling consistent modeling of equilibria.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The same measurement-plus-vibration method could be applied to additional high-pressure phases if new volume data appear.
  • Habitability assessments for icy bodies can now use a single set of functions rather than pieced-together tables.
  • Discrepancies between predicted and measured heat capacities at high pressure would point directly to needed refinements in the vibrational contribution.

Load-bearing premise

The new volume measurements at high pressure and the calculated vibrational energies are sufficiently accurate and complete to produce Gibbs functions whose derived properties match reality across the full stated pressure-temperature range without further empirical adjustment.

What would settle it

A laboratory measurement of the ice V-liquid water phase boundary or the density of ice VI at 1.5 GPa and 280 K that deviates beyond stated experimental uncertainty from the value computed from the new Gibbs function.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 1907.09598 by A. Pakhomova, B. Journaux, F. Cova, G. Garbarino, I. E. Collings, J.M. Brown, J. Ott, M. Hanfland, P. Espinoza, S. Petitgirard.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: Pressures as a function of specific volume for a) ice III, b) ice V and c) ice VI. Filled symbols are measurements. [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p005_1.png] view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: Isotropic aggregate elastic properties for ice Ih, III, V, and VI. a) bulk Ks and shear µ moduli as a function of density, and b) isotropic P and S-waves velocities as a function of pressure. Different symbols (described in the legend) are used for datasets from different studies. Brillouin and sound speed data (Gagnon et al. 1988, 1990; Tulk, Kiefte, et al. 1997; Tulk, Gagnon, et al. 1997; Shimizu et al. … view at source ↗
read the original abstract

Gibbs energy representations for ice III, V and VI are reported. These were constructed using new measurements of volumes at high pressure over a range of low temperatures combined with calculated vibrational energies grounded in statistical physics. The collection of representations including ice Ih and water (released as the open source SeaFreeze framework) allow accurate determinations of thermodynamics properties (phase boundaries, density, heat capacity, bulk modulus, thermal expansivity, chemical potentials) and seismic wave velocities over the entire range of conditions encountered in hydrospheres in our solar system (220 - 500K to 2300 MPa). These comprehensive representations allow exploration of the rich spectrum of thermodynamic behavior in the H2O system. Although the results are broadly applicable in science and engineering, their use in habitability analysis in water-rich planetary bodies of our solar system and beyond is particularly relevant.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 2 minor

Summary. The manuscript constructs Gibbs energy representations for ices III, V and VI from new high-pressure volume isotherms measured at low temperatures together with vibrational energies computed from statistical physics. These are combined with existing representations for ice Ih and liquid water inside the open-source SeaFreeze framework to yield phase boundaries, densities, heat capacities, bulk moduli, thermal expansivities, chemical potentials and seismic velocities over 220–500 K and to 2300 MPa.

Significance. If the central integration holds, the work supplies a unified, parameter-light thermodynamic description of the H2O system under conditions relevant to solar-system hydrospheres and supplies an immediately usable open-source implementation (SeaFreeze) that supports reproducible calculations of derived properties. The explicit grounding of vibrational contributions in statistical physics and the release of the full framework constitute clear strengths for planetary-science applications.

major comments (2)
  1. [Description of vibrational-energy construction (abstract and methods)] The central claim that the combination of the new volume data and the statistical-physics vibrational energies produces accurate Gibbs surfaces without further empirical adjustment rests on the unshown pressure dependence of the vibrational frequencies and on the extrapolation of those frequencies from the low-T regime into 400–500 K. No explicit test against independent high-T Cp or phase-boundary data is described that would confirm the absence of systematic error in the entropy and chemical-potential differences.
  2. [Results and validation sections] The manuscript does not report a quantitative comparison of the derived phase boundaries or densities for ices III/V/VI against independent high-pressure, high-temperature measurements (e.g., above 300 K) that were not used in the fit; such a comparison is required to substantiate the claim that the representations remain accurate across the full stated P–T domain.
minor comments (2)
  1. [Title] The term 'wholistic' in the title is non-standard; 'holistic' is the conventional spelling.
  2. [Figures and tables] Figure captions and table headings should explicitly state the temperature and pressure ranges over which each derived quantity (e.g., KT, α) was evaluated so that readers can immediately assess coverage of the 220–500 K interval.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their positive assessment of the significance of our work and for the constructive comments. We respond to each major comment below, indicating the revisions we will undertake.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Description of vibrational-energy construction (abstract and methods)] The central claim that the combination of the new volume data and the statistical-physics vibrational energies produces accurate Gibbs surfaces without further empirical adjustment rests on the unshown pressure dependence of the vibrational frequencies and on the extrapolation of those frequencies from the low-T regime into 400–500 K. No explicit test against independent high-T Cp or phase-boundary data is described that would confirm the absence of systematic error in the entropy and chemical-potential differences.

    Authors: We agree that the pressure dependence of the vibrational frequencies should be shown explicitly to support the construction of the Gibbs surfaces. In the revised manuscript, we will add a figure or section detailing the pressure dependence of the frequencies as computed from the statistical physics approach. For the temperature extrapolation, the calculations are based on the quasi-harmonic approximation, which we will justify more thoroughly with references to its applicability up to 500 K for these ices. Additionally, we will include explicit comparisons with available independent high-temperature phase boundary data and any existing Cp measurements to validate the entropy and chemical potential predictions, thereby addressing the concern about potential systematic errors. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [Results and validation sections] The manuscript does not report a quantitative comparison of the derived phase boundaries or densities for ices III/V/VI against independent high-pressure, high-temperature measurements (e.g., above 300 K) that were not used in the fit; such a comparison is required to substantiate the claim that the representations remain accurate across the full stated P–T domain.

    Authors: We acknowledge the need for quantitative validation against independent data not used in the construction. The volume data used were at low temperatures, and the vibrational energies are from first-principles calculations. In the revised version, we will add a dedicated validation section with quantitative comparisons of predicted phase boundaries and densities to independent high-pressure, high-temperature experimental measurements from the literature (e.g., from studies above 300 K), reporting metrics such as average deviations to demonstrate accuracy across the 220–500 K and up to 2300 MPa range. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity; derivation uses independent inputs

full rationale

The paper constructs Gibbs representations for ices III/V/VI from new high-pressure volume measurements (low T) combined with vibrational energies calculated via statistical physics. No equations, self-citations, or fitted parameters are shown that reduce derived properties (phase boundaries, Cp, KT, etc.) to the inputs by construction. The approach is presented as combining external measurements with first-principles statistical mechanics, making the central claim independent rather than tautological. This is the expected non-finding for a data-plus-calculation paper without load-bearing self-references or renaming of known results.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

Abstract-only review; ledger entries are inferred from the stated construction method. The central claim rests on the accuracy of new volume data and the validity of the statistical-physics vibrational calculation procedure.

axioms (1)
  • domain assumption Vibrational energies can be calculated from statistical physics using the measured volumes as input.
    Abstract states 'calculated vibrational energies grounded in statistical physics' without specifying the functional form or any validation.

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Reference graph

Works this paper leans on

62 extracted references · 62 canonical work pages · 1 internal anchor

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