15 research outputs found
Metallic liquid hydrogen and likely Al2O3 metallic glass
Dynamic compression has been used to synthesize liquid metallic hydrogen at
140 GPa (1.4 million bar) and experimental data and theory predict Al2O3 might
be a metallic glass at ~300 GPa. The mechanism of metallization in both cases
is probably a Mott-like transition. The strength of sapphire causes shock
dissipation to be split differently in the strong solid and soft fluid. Once
the 4.5-eV H-H and Al-O bonds are broken at sufficiently high pressures in
liquid H2 and in sapphire (single-crystal Al2O3), electrons are delocalized,
which leads to formation of energy bands in fluid H and probably in amorphous
Al2O3. The high strength of sapphire causes shock dissipation to be absorbed
primarily in entropy up to ~400 GPa, which also causes the 300-K isotherm and
Hugoniot to be virtually coincident in this pressure range. Above ~400 GPa
shock dissipation must go primarily into temperature, which is observed
experimentally as a rapid increase in shock pressure above ~400 GPa. The
metallization of glassy Al2O3, if verified, is expected to be general in strong
oxide insulators. Implications for Super Earths are discussed.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, 14th Liquid and Amorphous Metals Conference, Rome
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Thermal Stabilization of the HCP Phase in Titanium
We have used a tight-binding model that is fit to first-principles
electronic-structure calculations for titanium to calculate quasi-harmonic
phonons and the Gibbs free energy of the hexagonal close-packed (hcp) and omega
crystal structures. We show that the true zero-temperature ground-state is the
omega structure, although this has never been observed experimentally at normal
pressure, and that it is the entropy from the thermal population of phonon
states which stabilizes the hcp structure at room temperature. We present the
first completely theoretical prediction of the temperature- and
pressure-dependence of the hcp-omega phase transformation and show that it is
in good agreement with experiment. The quasi-harmonic approximation fails to
adequately treat the bcc phase because the zero-temperature phonons of this
structure are not all stable
Test of a theoretical equation of state for elemental solids and liquids
We propose a means for constructing highly accurate equations of state (EOS)
for elemental solids and liquids essentially from first principles, based upon
a particular decomposition of the underlying condensed matter Hamiltonian for
the nuclei and electrons. We also point out that at low pressures the neglect
of anharmonic and electron-phonon terms, both contained in this formalism,
results in errors of less than 5% in the thermal parts of the thermodynamic
functions. Then we explicitly display the forms of the remaining terms in the
EOS, commenting on the use of experiment and electronic structure theory to
evaluate them. We also construct an EOS for Aluminum and compare the resulting
Hugoniot with data up to 5 Mbar, both to illustrate our method and to see
whether the approximation of neglecting anharmonicity et al. remains viable to
such high pressures. We find a level of agreement with experiment that is
consistent with the low-pressure results.Comment: Minor revisions for consistency with published versio