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To freeze this liquid, add heat.


Researchers in France have discovered a liquid mixture that freezes into a waxy waxy (wak´se)
1. composed of or covered by wax.

2. resembling wax, especially denoting some combination of pliability, paleness, and smoothness and luster.
 crystalline solid Crystalline solids are a class of solids that have regular or nearly-regular crystalline structures. This means that the atoms in these solids are arranged in an orderly manner.  when heated. It appears to be the first solution to exhibit an abnormal heat-induced transition from liquid to solid rather than the other way around, report Hans-Peter Trommsdorff of Joseph Fourier University Coordinates:  Université Joseph Fourier (Joseph Fourier University  in Grenoble and his colleagues. They detail the finding in the Sept. 15 Journal of Chemical Physics The Journal of Chemical Physics is a scientific journal that publishes research papers on all areas of chemical physics. Two volumes, each of 24 issues, are published per year. It is published by the American Institute of Physics. The impact factor of the journal in 2005 was 3.138. .

The scientists created the surprising substance by mixing alpha-cyclodextrine--whose molecules are loops made of six glucose molecules--with water and the common, foul-smelling organic solvent 4-methylpyridine.

At room temperature, about 20[degrees]C, the mixture is a clear liquid. It transforms into a milky white block at a temperature between 45[degrees]C and 75[degrees]C, depending on the proportions of the mixture's ingredients. This is not a gelling effect, the researchers say.

"There's no chemical change: notes physical chemist Ralf Schweins of the Laue-Langevin Institute in Grenoble, a member of the research team. "When you cool it down, it becomes a liquid again." Tests also indicate that the heat-formed solid reliquefies when heated above approximately 95[degrees]C, the team reports.

The team's computer simulations suggest why solidification occurs at the transition from cooler liquid to warmer solid. Some weak intermolecular Adj. 1. intermolecular - existing or acting between molecules; "intermolecular forces"; "intermolecular condensation"  attractions, called hydrogen bonds hydrogen bond
n.
A chemical bond in which a hydrogen atom of one molecule is attracted to an electronegative atom, especially a nitrogen, oxygen, or fluorine atom, usually of another molecule.
, which ordinarily would strengthen links between the glucose components of alpha-cyclodextrine become disrupted. This allows new hydrogen bonds to form between the solution's different constituents.--P.W.
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Rjtech
Rj Thermo (Member): Amazing Development of Mixture 8/29/2009 11:38 AM
The test I think would have been satisfying if the mixture was enclose or conducted in a way that temperatures of the mixture itself in every stage of formation or reaction was observed and closely monitored. There must be an amazingly underlaying temperature it creates other than the temperatures induced.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:Physics
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Oct 16, 2004
Words:237
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