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Investigation of high-pressure planetary ices by cryo-recovery. II. High-pressure apparatus, examples and a new high-pressure phase of MgSO(4)·5H(2)O

An apparatus is described for the compression of samples to ∼2 GPa at temperatures from 80 to 300 K, rapid chilling to 80 K whilst under load and subsequent recovery into liquid nitro­gen after the load is released. In this way, a variety of quenchable high-pressure phases of many materials may be p...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Wang, Weiwei, Fortes, A. Dominic, Dobson, David P., Howard, Christopher M., Bowles, John, Hughes, Neil J., Wood, Ian G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Union of Crystallography 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5988006/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29896058
http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S1600576718003977
Descripción
Sumario:An apparatus is described for the compression of samples to ∼2 GPa at temperatures from 80 to 300 K, rapid chilling to 80 K whilst under load and subsequent recovery into liquid nitro­gen after the load is released. In this way, a variety of quenchable high-pressure phases of many materials may be preserved for examination outside the high-pressure sample environment, with the principal benefit being the ability to obtain high-resolution powder diffraction data for phase identification and structure solution. The use of this apparatus, in combination with a newly developed cold-loadable low-temperature stage for X-ray powder diffraction (the PheniX-FL), is illustrated using ice VI (a high-pressure polymorph of ordinary water ice that is thermodynamically stable only above ∼0.6 GPa) as an example. A second example using synthetic epsomite (MgSO(4)·7H(2)O) reveals that, at ∼1.6 GPa and 293 K, it undergoes incongruent melting to form MgSO(4)·5H(2)O plus brine, contributing to a long-standing debate on the nature of the high-pressure behaviour of this and similar highly hydrated materials. The crystal structure of this new high-pressure polymorph of MgSO(4)·5H(2)O has been determined at 85 K in space group Pna2(1) from the X-ray powder diffraction pattern of a sample recovered into liquid nitro­gen and is found to differ from that of the known ambient-pressure phase of MgSO(4)·5H(2)O (pentahydrite, space group [Image: see text]), consisting of corner-sharing MgO(6)–SO(4) ion pairs rather than infinite corner-sharing chains.