385 research outputs found
Physics of mantle and core minerals
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
On the stability of rhenium up to 1 TPa pressure against transition to the bcc structure
We have carried out electronic structure total energy calculations on rhenium in the hexagonal close packed (hcp) and body centred cubic (bcc) phases, by the full potential linear muffin-tin orbital method, in order to verify the stability of the ambient pressure hep phase against transition to the bcc structure at high pressures. As per our results, no hcp to bcc structural transition can occur up to 1 TPa pressures. Moreover, our Bain path calculations show that face centred cubic and body centred tetragonal structures are also not energetically preferred over hcp in this pressure range. The axial ratio (c/a) of Re changes by less than 0-33% in the pressure range studied
Direct observation of the influence of the As-Fe-As angle on the Tc of superconducting SmFeAsOF
The electrical resistivity, crystalline structure and electronic properties
calculated from the experimentally measured atomic positions of the compound
SmFeAsOF have been studied up to pressures ~20GPa. The
correlation between the pressure dependence of the superconducting transition
temperature (Tc) and crystallographic parameters on the same sample shows
clearly that a regular FeAs tetrahedron maximizes Tc, through
optimization of carrier transfer to the FeAs planes as indicated by the
evolution of the electronic band structures.Comment: 15pages, 4 figure
Stability of the hcp phase and temperature variation of the axial ratio of iron near Earth-core conditions
We theoretically document the stability of hcp iron for pressureâtemperature conditions of the Earthâs inner core by separately computing the electronic and phonon contributions to the free energy. These pseudopotential-based quasi-harmonic calculations reveal that the hcp phase remains stable compared to bcc and that the c/a ratio of lattice parameters exhibits only a modest temperature dependence at inner-core conditions.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58123/2/cm7_1_016208.pd
High-pressure investigations of CaTiO3 up to 60 GPa using X-ray diffraction and Raman spectroscopy
In this work, we investigate calcium titanate (CaTiO3 - CTO) using X-ray
diffraction and Raman spectroscopy up to 60 and 55 GPa respectively. Both
experiments show that the orthorhombic Pnma structure remains stable up to the
highest pressures measured, in contradiction to ab-initio predictions. A fit of
the compression data with a second-order Birch-Murnaghan equation of state
yields a bulk modulus K0 of 181.0(6) GPa. The orthorhombic distortion is found
to increase slightly with pressure, in agreement with previous experiments at
lower pressures and the general rules for the evolution of perovskites under
pressure. High-pressure polarized Raman spectra also enable us to clarify the
Raman mode assignment of CTO and identify the modes corresponding to rigid
rotation of the octahedra, A-cation shifts and Ti-O bond stretching. The Raman
signature is then discussed in terms of compression mechanisms.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, 4 table
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High-pressure nano-seismology: Use of micro-ring resonators for characterizing acoustic emissions
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Imaging stress and magnetism at high pressures using a nanoscale quantum sensor.
Pressure alters the physical, chemical, and electronic properties of matter. The diamond anvil cell enables tabletop experiments to investigate a diverse landscape of high-pressure phenomena. Here, we introduce and use a nanoscale sensing platform that integrates nitrogen-vacancy (NV) color centers directly into the culet of diamond anvils. We demonstrate the versatility of this platform by performing diffraction-limited imaging of both stress fields and magnetism as a function of pressure and temperature. We quantify all normal and shear stress components and demonstrate vector magnetic field imaging, enabling measurement of the pressure-driven [Formula: see text] phase transition in iron and the complex pressure-temperature phase diagram of gadolinium. A complementary NV-sensing modality using noise spectroscopy enables the characterization of phase transitions even in the absence of static magnetic signatures
Imaging stress and magnetism at high pressures using a nanoscale quantum sensor
Pressure alters the physical, chemical and electronic properties of matter.
The development of the diamond anvil cell (DAC) enables tabletop experiments to
investigate a diverse landscape of high-pressure phenomena ranging from the
properties of planetary interiors to transitions between quantum mechanical
phases. In this work, we introduce and utilize a novel nanoscale sensing
platform, which integrates nitrogen-vacancy (NV) color centers directly into
the culet (tip) of diamond anvils. We demonstrate the versatility of this
platform by performing diffraction-limited imaging (~600 nm) of both stress
fields and magnetism, up to pressures ~30 GPa and for temperatures ranging from
25-340 K. For the former, we quantify all six (normal and shear) stress
components with accuracy GPa, offering unique new capabilities for
characterizing the strength and effective viscosity of solids and fluids under
pressure. For the latter, we demonstrate vector magnetic field imaging with
dipole accuracy emu, enabling us to measure the pressure-driven
phase transition in iron as well as the complex
pressure-temperature phase diagram of gadolinium. In addition to DC vector
magnetometry, we highlight a complementary NV-sensing modality using T1 noise
spectroscopy; crucially, this demonstrates our ability to characterize phase
transitions even in the absence of static magnetic signatures. By integrating
an atomic-scale sensor directly into DACs, our platform enables the in situ
imaging of elastic, electric and magnetic phenomena at high pressures.Comment: 18 + 50 pages, 4 + 19 figure
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