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The three site-site partial structure factors for water have been measured as a function of pressure, using neutron diffraction, at a temperature of 268 K. It is found that the measured structure functions imply a continuous transformation with increasing pressure from a low-density form of water ( rho(L) approximately 0.0295 molecules/A(3)), with an open, hydrogen-bonded tetrahedral structure, to a high-density form of water ( rho(H) approximately 0.0402 molecules/A(3)), with nontetrahedral O-O-O angles and a collapsed second coordination shell, which implies broken hydrogen bonds between the first and second coordination shells.
Soper et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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