Probing iron in Earth's core with molecular-spin dynamics

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Abstract

Dynamic compression of iron to Earth-core conditions is one of the few ways to gather important elastic and transport properties needed to uncover key mechanisms surrounding the geodynamo effect. Herein, a machine-learned ab initio derived molecular-spin dynamics (MSD) methodology with explicit treatment for longitudinal spin-fluctuations is utilized to probe the dynamic phase-diagram of iron. This framework uniquely enables an accurate resolution of the phase-transition kinetics and Earth-core elastic properties, as highlighted by compressional wave velocity and adiabatic bulk moduli measurements. In addition, a unique coupling of MSD with time-dependent density functional theory enables gauging electronic transport properties, critically important for resolving geodynamo dynamics.

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Nikolov, S., Ramakrishna, K., Rohskopf, A., Lokamani, M., Tranchida, J., Carpenter, J., … Wood, M. A. (2024). Probing iron in Earth’s core with molecular-spin dynamics. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 121(51). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2408897121

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