Abstract
In situ, time-resolved, x-ray diffraction and simultaneous continuum measurements were used to examine structural changes in Si shock compressed to 54 GPa. Shock melting was unambiguously established above ∼31-33 GPa, through the vanishing of all sharp crystalline diffraction peaks and the emergence of a single broad diffraction ring. Reshock from the melt boundary results in rapid (nanosecond) recrystallization to the hexagonal-close-packed Si phase and further supports melting. Our results also provide new constraints on the higherature, high-pressure Si phase diagram.
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CITATION STYLE
Turneaure, S. J., Sharma, S. M., & Gupta, Y. M. (2018). Nanosecond Melting and Recrystallization in Shock-Compressed Silicon. Physical Review Letters, 121(13). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.121.135701
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