Shock-wave experiments on iron preheated to 1573 K from 14 to 73 GPa, yield sound velocities of the γ- and liquid-phases. Melting is observed in the highest pressure (∼71 ± 2 GPa) experiments at calculated shock temperatures of 2775 ± 160 K. This single crossing of the γ-liquid boundary agrees with the γ-iron melting line of Boehler [1993], Saxena et al. [1993], and Jephcoat and Besedin [1997]. This γ-iron melting curve is ∼300°C lower than that of Shen et al. [1998] at 80 GPa. In agreement with Brown [2001] the discrepancy between the diamond cell melting data and the iron shock temperatures require the occurrence of yet another sub-solidus phase along the principal Hugoniot at ∼200 GPa. This would reconcile the static and dynamic data for iron's melting curve. Upward pressure and temperature extrapolation of the γ-iron melting curve to 330 GPa yields 5300 ± 400 K for the inner core-outer core boundary temperature.
CITATION STYLE
Ahrens, T. J., Holland, K. G., & Chen, G. Q. (2002). Phase diagram of iron, revised-core temperatures. Geophysical Research Letters, 29(7), 54-1-54–4. https://doi.org/10.1029/2001GL014350
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.