Abstract
Magnesium oxide has been experimentally and computationally investigated in the warm-dense solid and liquid ranges from 200 GPa to 1 TPa along the principal Hugoniot. The linear approximation between shock velocity and particle velocity is validated up to a shock velocity of 15 km/s from the experimental data, this suggesting that the MgO B1 structure is stable up to the corresponding shock pressure of ∼350 GPa. Moreover, our Hugoniot data, combined with ab initio simulations, show two crossovers between MgO Hugoniot and the extrapolation of the linear approximation line, occurring at a shock pressures of approximately 350 and 650 GPa, with shock temperatures of 8000 and 14 000 K, respectively. These crossover regions are consistent with the solid-solid (B1-B2) and the solid-liquid (B2-melt) phase boundaries predicted by the ab initio calculations.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Miyanishi, K., Tange, Y., Ozaki, N., Kimura, T., Sano, T., Sakawa, Y., … Kodama, R. (2015). Laser-shock compression of magnesium oxide in the warm-dense-matter regime. Physical Review E - Statistical, Nonlinear, and Soft Matter Physics, 92(2). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.92.023103
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.