Triple point

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File:Phase-diag2.svg
A typical phase diagram. The solid green line applies to most substances; the dashed green line gives the anomalous behavior of water

In thermodynamics, the triple point of a substance is the temperature and pressure at which the three phases (gas, liquid, and solid) of that substance coexist in thermodynamic equilibrium.[1] It is that temperature and pressure at which the sublimation, fusion, and vapourisation curves meet. For example, the triple point of mercury occurs at a temperature of Template:Convert and a pressure of 0.165 mPa.

In addition to the triple point for solid, liquid, and gas phases, a triple point may involve more than one solid phase, for substances with multiple polymorphs. Helium-4 is unusual in that it has no sublimation/deposition curve and therefore no triple points where its solid phase meets its gas phase. Instead, it has a vapor-liquid-superfluid point, a solid-liquid-superfluid point, a solid-solid-liquid point, and a solid-solid-superfluid point. None of these should be confused with the lambda point, which is not any kind of triple point.

The first mention of the term "triple point" was on August 3, 1871 by James Thomson, brother of Lord Kelvin.[2] The triple points of several substances are used to define points in the ITS-90 international temperature scale, ranging from the triple point of hydrogen (13.8033 K) to the triple point of water (273.16 K, 0.01 °C, or 32.018 °F).

Before 2019, the triple point of water was used to define the kelvin, the base unit of thermodynamic temperature in the International System of Units (SI).[3] The kelvin was defined so that the triple point of water is exactly 273.16 K, but that changed with the 2019 revision of the SI, where the kelvin was redefined so that the Boltzmann constant is exactly Template:Val, and the triple point of water became an experimentally measured constant.

Triple point of water

Gas–liquid–solid triple point

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File:Water-triple-point-20210210.gif
Water boiling at 0°C using a vacuum pump.

Following the 2019 revision of the SI, the value of the triple point of water is no longer used as a defining point. However, its empirical value remains important: the unique combination of pressure and temperature at which liquid water, solid ice, and water vapour coexist in a stable equilibrium is approximately Template:Val[4] and a vapour pressure of Template:Convert.[5][6]

Liquid water can only exist at pressures equal to or greater than the triple point. Below this, in the vacuum of outer space, solid ice sublimates, transitioning directly into water vapor when heated at a constant pressure. Conversely, at pressure above the triple point, solid ice upon heating first melts into liquid water at constant temperature, then evaporates or boils to form vapor at a higher temperature.

For most substances, the gas–liquid–solid triple point is the minimum temperature where the liquid can exist. For water, this is not the case. The melting point of ordinary ice decreases with pressure, as shown by the phase diagram's dashed green line. Just below the triple point, compression at a constant temperature transforms water vapor first to solid and then to liquid.

Historically, during the Mariner 9 mission to Mars, the triple point pressure of water was used to define "sea level". Now, laser altimetry and gravitational measurements are preferred to define Martian elevation.[7]

High-pressure phases

At high pressures, water has a complex phase diagram with 15 known phases of ice and several triple points, including 10 whose coordinates are shown in the diagram. For example, the triple point at 251 K (−22 °C) and 210 MPa (2070 atm) corresponds to the conditions for the coexistence of ice Ih (ordinary ice), ice III and liquid water, all at equilibrium. There are also triple points for the coexistence of three solid phases, for example ice II, ice V and ice VI at 218 K (−55 °C) and 620 MPa (6120 atm).

For those high-pressure forms of ice which can exist in equilibrium with liquid, the diagram shows that melting points increase with pressure. At temperatures above 273 K (0 °C), increasing the pressure on water vapor results first in liquid water and then a high-pressure form of ice. In the range Template:Val, ice I is formed first, followed by liquid water and then ice III or ice V, followed by other still denser high-pressure forms.

File:Phase diagram of water.svg
Phase diagram of water including high-pressure forms ice II, ice III, etc. The pressure axis is logarithmic. For detailed descriptions of these phases, see Ice.
The various triple points of water
Phases in stable equilibrium Pressure Temperature
liquid water, ice Ih, and water vapor 611.657 Pa[8] 273.16 K (0.0001 °C)[4]
liquid water, ice Ih, and ice III 209.9 MPa 251 K (−22 °C)
liquid water, ice III, and ice V 350.1 MPa −17.0 °C
liquid water, ice V, and ice VI 632.4 MPa 0.16 °C
ice Ih, Ice II, and ice III 213 MPa −35 °C
ice II, ice III, and ice V 344 MPa −24 °C
ice II, ice V, and ice VI 626 MPa −70 °C

Triple-point cells

Triple-point cells are used in the calibration of thermometers. For exacting work, triple-point cells are typically filled with a highly pure chemical substance such as hydrogen, argon, mercury, or water (depending on the desired temperature). The purity of these substances can be such that only one part in a million is a contaminant, called "six nines" because it is 99.9999% pure. A specific isotopic composition (for water, VSMOW) is used because variations in isotopic composition cause small changes in the triple point. Triple-point cells are so effective at achieving highly precise, reproducible temperatures, that an international calibration standard for thermometers called ITS–90 relies upon triple-point cells of hydrogen, neon, oxygen, argon, mercury, and water for delineating six of its defined temperature points.

Table of triple points

This table lists the gas–liquid–solid triple points of several substances. Unless otherwise noted, the data come from the U.S. National Bureau of Standards (now NIST, National Institute of Standards and Technology).[9]

Substance T [K] (°C) p [kPa]* (atm)
Acetylene Template:Convert Template:Convert
Ammonia Template:Convert Template:Convert
Argon Template:Convert Template:Convert
Arsenic Template:Convert Template:Convert
Butane[10] Template:Convert Template:Convert
Carbon (graphite) Template:Convert Template:Convert
Carbon dioxide Template:Convert Template:Convert
Carbon monoxide Template:Convert Template:Convert
Chloroform[11][12] Template:Convert ?
Deuterium Template:Convert Template:Convert
Ethane Template:Convert Template:Convert
Ethanol[13] Template:Convert Template:Convert
Ethylene Template:Convert Template:Convert
Formic acid[14] Template:Convert Template:Convert
Helium-4 (vapor−He-I−He-II)[15] Template:Convert Template:Convert
Helium-4 (hcpbcc−He-II)[16] Template:Convert Template:Convert
Helium-4 (bcc−He-I−He-II)[16] Template:Convert Template:Convert
Helium-4 (hcp−bcc−He-I)[16] Template:Convert Template:Convert
Hexafluoroethane[17] Template:Convert Template:Convert
Hydrogen Template:Convert Template:Convert
Hydrogen-1 (Protium)[18] Template:Convert Template:Convert
Hydrogen chloride Template:Convert Template:Convert
Iodine[19] Template:Convert Template:Convert
Isobutane[20] Template:Convert Template:Convert
Krypton Template:Convert Template:Convert
Mercury Template:Convert Template:Convert
Methane Template:Convert Template:Convert
Neon Template:Convert Template:Convert
Nitric oxide Template:Convert Template:Convert
Nitrogen Template:Convert Template:Convert
Nitrous oxide Template:Convert Template:Convert
Oxygen Template:Convert Template:Convert
Palladium Template:Convert Template:Convert
Platinum Template:Convert Template:Convert
Radon Template:Convert Template:Convert
(mono)Silane[21] Template:Convert Template:Convert
Sulfur dioxide Template:Convert Template:Convert
Titanium Template:Convert Template:Convert
Uranium hexafluoride Template:Convert Template:Convert
Water[5][6] Template:Convert Template:Convert
Xenon Template:Convert Template:Convert
Zinc Template:Convert Template:Convert

Notes:

  • For comparison, typical atmospheric pressure is 101.325 kPa (1 atm).
  • Before the new definition of SI units, water's triple point, 273.16 K, was an exact number.

See also

References

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External links

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  1. Template:GoldBookRef.
  2. James Thomson (1871) "Speculations on the Continuity of the Fluid State of Matter, and on Relations between the Gaseous, the Liquid, and the Solid States.", The British Association Meeting at Edinburgh . Nature 4, 288–298 (1871). From Section A on page 291: "This point of pressure and temperature he designates as the triple point; and he shows how this point belongs to the three important curves, as being their intersection."
  3. Definition of the kelvin at BIPM.
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  5. a b International Equations for the Pressure along the Melting and along the Sublimation Curve of Ordinary Water Substance. W. Wagner, A. Saul and A. Pruss (1994), J. Phys. Chem. Ref. Data, 23, 515.
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  10. See Butane (data page)
  11. See Chloroform (data page)
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  13. See Ethanol (data page)
  14. See Formic acid (data page)
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  17. See Hexafluoroethane (data page)
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  20. See Isobutane (data page)
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