High-pressure behavior of Fe 2 O 3

  • Bykova E
  • Bykov M
  • Prakapenka V
  • et al.
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Abstract

High pressure behavior of Fe 2 O 3 has been a long-standing subject of research due to its high importance for understanding Earth's interiors. At pressures from 40 to 60 GPa it undergoes a series of transformations, such as structural changes with a large volume discontinuity (~10 %), a drop of the resistivity, a spin crossover of Fe 3 + , and a disappearance of the ordered magnetic state. The crystal structure of the phase(s) observed on compression at ambient temperature above 50 GPa is still under question since only powder X-ray diffraction (XRD) data were available so far. Mössbauer and Raman spectroscopy studies cannot provide definitive structural information. Applying laser heating to Fe 2 O 3 , compressed up to 70 GPa and above, results in a distinct reconstructive phase transition to the CaIrO 3 -type structure, according to powder XRD. Poverty of the available structural data encouraged us to perform a series of high-pressure and high-temperature XRD experiments on single crystals of Fe 2 O 3 in diamond anvil cells. We have studied the behavior of Fe 2 O 3 at pressures up to 100 GPa and temperatures up to 2500 K. Here we report crystal structures of two novel high-pressure Fe 2 O 3 polymorphs, as well as the relations between a spin state of iron atoms and the crystal chemistry of the iron compound. In our compression experiments initially hematite-structured Fe 2 O 3 transformed to a new phase at ~54 GPa with 10 % of the volume reduction. This phase has a triclinic distorted perovskite-type structure. The second reconstructive transition occurred at 66–70 GPa with 3 % of the volume discontinuity and resulted in formation of an orthorhombic phase. Laser heating to ~2100 1 100 K at pressures above 70 GPa promoted a transition to a Cmcm CaIrO 3 -type phase, whose crystal structure was refined by means of single crystal XRD to R 1 ~ 9.7 %. Decompression experiments showed that the Cmcm phase transforms back to hematite at pressures between ~25 and 15 GPa.

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Bykova, E., Bykov, M., Prakapenka, V., Konôpková, Z., Liermann, H.-P., Dubrovinskaia, N., & Dubrovinsky, L. (2014). High-pressure behavior of Fe 2 O 3. Acta Crystallographica Section A Foundations and Advances, 70(a1), C49–C49. https://doi.org/10.1107/s2053273314099501

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