ABSTRACT
Synchrotron x-ray diffraction (XRD) measurements, nuclear forward scattering (NFS) measurements, and density functional theory (DFT) calculations were performed on L1_{2}-ordered Pd3Fe. Measurements were performed at 300 K at pressures up to 33 GPa, and at 7 GPa at temperatures up to 650 K. The NFS revealed a collapse of the 57Fe magnetic moment between 8.9 and 12.3 GPa at 300 K, coinciding with a transition in bulk modulus found by XRD. Heating the sample under a pressure of 7 GPa showed negligible thermal expansion from 300 to 523 K, demonstrating Invar behavior. Zero-temperature DFT calculations identified a ferromagnetic ground state and showed several antiferromagnetic states had comparable energies at pressures above 20 GPa.
ABSTRACT
The effects of high pressure on the structural stability of the melamine-boric acid adduct (C3N6H(6).2H3BO3, M.2B), a three-dimensional hydrogen-bonded supramolecular architecture, were studied by in situ synchrotron X-ray diffraction (XRD) and Raman spectroscopy. M.2B exhibited a high compressibility and a strong anisotropic compression, which can be explained by the layerlike crystal packing. Furthermore, evolution of XRD patterns and Raman spectra indicated that the M.2B crystal undergoes a reversible pressure-induced amorphization (PIA) at 18 GPa. The mechanism for the PIA was attributed to the competition between close packing and long-range order. Ab initio calculations were also performed to account for the behavior of hydrogen bonding under high pressure.
ABSTRACT
A pressure-induced splitting of the Cu-O chains was found in SrCuO2 at pressures >7 GPa and room temperature. The high-pressure phase is a superstructure of the infinite-layered tetragonal superconducting phase of SrCuO2 and is not stable under ambient conditions. The Cu-O chains buckle with further increasing pressure, and a new high-density polymorph of SrCuO2 is formed at 34.2 GPa.
ABSTRACT
In-situ high-pressure synchrotron angle-dispersive X-ray diffraction for gibbsite (aluminum trihydroxide) was performed at room temperature up to 20 GPa. A pressure-induced phase transition was observed at 2.6 GPa. The new high-pressure phase can be recovered at ambient pressure. Rietveld refinement shows that the new phase of Al(OH)(3) has an orthorhombic structure, spacegroup Pbca, and the lattice parameters at ambient condition are a = 868.57(5) pm, b = 505.21(4) pm, c = 949.54(6) pm, V = 416.67(6) x 10(6) pm(3) with Z = 8. The compressibility of gibbsite and the high-pressure polymorph was analyzed, and their bulk moduli were estimated as 49.8 +/- 1.8 and 81.0 +/- 5.2 GPa, respectively. First-principles calculations of the high-pressure phase were performed to determine the hydrogen positions and to confirm the structural stability of the new phase.
Subject(s)
Aluminum Hydroxide/chemistry , Pressure , Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared , Spectrum Analysis, Raman , Surface Tension , X-Ray DiffractionABSTRACT
High-pressure Raman, infrared, x-ray, and neutron studies show that H2 and H2O mixtures crystallize into the sII clathrate structure with an approximate H2/H2O molar ratio of 1:2. The clathrate cages are multiply occupied, with a cluster of two H2 molecules in the small cage and four in the large cage. Substantial softening and splitting of hydrogen vibrons indicate increased intermolecular interactions. The quenched clathrate is stable up to 145 kelvin at ambient pressure. Retention of hydrogen at such high temperatures could help its condensation in planetary nebulae and may play a key role in the evolution of icy bodies.