Iron-nickel alloy in the Earth's core

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Abstract

The phase relations of an Fe10wt%Ni alloy were investigated in a diamond anvil cell up to 86 GPa and 2382 K. Adding nickel into iron stabilizes the fcc phase to higher pressures and lower temperatures compared to pure iron, and a region of two-phase coexistence between fcc and hcp phases is observed. Iron with up to 10 wt% nickel is likely to be in the hcp structure under inner core conditions. The axial ratio (c/a) of hcp-Fe10wt%Ni has a weak pressure dependence, but it increases substantially with increasing temperature. The extrapolated c/a ratio at ∼5700 K and ∼86 GPa is approximately 1.64, lower than a theoretically predicted value of nearly 1.7 for hcp-Fe at 5700 K and inner-core pressure. A lower c/a ratio should have an effect on the longitudinal anisotropy of the hcp phase, and hence, may influence the interpretation of the seismic wave anisotropy of the inner core.

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Lin, J. F., Heinz, D. L., Campbell, A. J., Devine, J. M., Mao, W. L., & Shen, G. (2002). Iron-nickel alloy in the Earth’s core. Geophysical Research Letters, 29(10), 109-1-109–3. https://doi.org/10.1029/2002gl015089

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