Polyamorphism has been experimentally observed or theoretically suggested in
silicon, liquid
phosphorus,
triphenyl phosphate,
mannitol, and in some other
molecular network-forming substances.
Water and structural analogues The most famous case of polyamorphism is
amorphous ice. Pressurizing conventional hexagonal ice crystals to about 1.6 GPa at
liquid nitrogen temperature (77 K) converts them to the high-density amorphous ice. Upon releasing the pressure, this phase is stable and has density of 1.17 g/cm3 at 77 K and 1 bar. Consequent warming to 127 K at ambient pressure transforms this phase to a low-density amorphous ice (0.94 g/cm3 at 1 bar). Yet, if the high-density amorphous ice is warmed up to 165 K not at low pressures but keeping the 1.6 GPa compression, and then cooled back to 77 K, then another amorphous ice is produced, which has even higher density of 1.25 g/cm3 at 1 bar. All those amorphous forms have very different vibrational lattice spectra and intermolecular distances. A similar abrupt liquid-amorphous
phase transition is predicted in liquid silicon when cooled under high pressures. This observation is based on first principles
molecular dynamics computer simulations, and might be expected intuitively since tetrahedral
amorphous carbon, silicon, and germanium are known to be structurally analogous to water.
Oxide liquids and glasses Yttria-
alumina melts are another system reported to exhibit polyamorphism. Observation of a liquid–liquid phase transition in the supercooled liquid has been reported. Though this is disputed in the literature. Polyamorphism has also been reported in Yttria-Alumina glasses. Yttria-Alumina melts quenched from about 1900 °C at a rate ~400 °C/s, can form glasses containing a second co-existing phase. This happens for certain Y/Al ratios (about 20–40 mol% Y2O3). The two phases have the same average composition but different density, molecular structure and hardness. However whether the second phase is glassy or crystalline is also debated. Continuous changes in density were observed upon cooling
silicon dioxide or
germanium dioxide. Although continuous density changes do not constitute a first order transition, they may be indicative of an underlying abrupt transition.
Organic materials Polyamorphism has also been observed in organic compounds, such as liquid
triphenyl phosphite at temperatures between 210 K and 226 K and
n-butanol at temperatures between 120 K and 140 K. Polyamorphism is also an important area in pharmaceutical science. The amorphous form of a drug typically has much better aqueous solubility (compared to the analogous crystalline form) but the actual local structure in an amorphous pharmaceutical can be different, depending on the method used to form the amorphous phase. Mannitol is the first pharmaceutical substance featuring polyamorphism. In addition to the regular amorphous phase, a second amorphous phase can be prepared at room temperature and pressure. This new phase has substantially lower energy, lower density and higher
glass transition temperature. Since mannitol is widely used in pharmaceutical tablet formulations, mannitol polyamorphism offers a powerful tool to engineer the property and behavior of tablets. ==See also==