• How to look thousands of kilometers deep

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Fri Feb 18 21:30:46 2022
    How to look thousands of kilometers deep into the Earth
    Rock properties are hard to measure under extreme pressure. Scientists
    present a simple solution for a very challenging problem

    Date:
    February 18, 2022
    Source:
    GFZ GeoForschungsZentrum Potsdam, Helmholtz Centre
    Summary:
    Researchers have developed a new method to measure the density of
    silicon dioxide (SiO2) glass, one of the most important materials
    in industry and geology, at pressures of up to 110 gigapascals,
    1.1 million times higher than normal atmospheric pressure. Instead
    of employing highly focused X- rays at a synchrotron facility,
    they used a white laser beam and a diamond anvil cell.



    FULL STORY ========================================================================== Researchers led by Sergey Lobanov from the GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences have developed a new method to measure the density of silicon dioxide (SiO2) glass, one of the most important materials in industry
    and geology, at pressures of up to 110 gigapascals, 1.1 million times
    higher than normal atmospheric pressure. Instead of employing highly
    focused X-rays at a synchrotron facility, they used a white laser beam
    and a diamond anvil cell.

    The researchers report on their new and simple method in the current
    issue of Physical Review Letters.


    ==========================================================================
    The problem of density measurement under extreme conditions In
    geosciences, the density of minerals, rocks, and melts at pressures up to several million atmospheres and temperatures of several thousand degrees
    is of critical importance because it governs the long-term planetary
    evolution as well as volcanic processes. But how can the density of a
    material be measured at such extreme conditions? To answer this question
    for a crystalline mineral or a rock, scientists use X-ray diffraction
    with which one measures the spacing between the periodically arranged
    atoms. There is, however, a problem if the material has a disordered
    structure, i.e. is non-crystalline, like glasses or molten rocks. In
    this case, the volume of the sample has to be measured directly --
    the density of a material equals its mass divided by volume.

    However, such measurements are extremely difficult because of the
    tiny volume of the sample brought to high pressure. Previously, these measurements required large scale X-ray facilities and highly specialized equipment, thus being very expensive. Now, a team led by scientist
    Sergey Lobanov of the GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences is
    introducing a new method in which a laser the size of a shoebox allows
    them to measure the volume of samples brought to pressures similar to
    that at the depth of more than 2000 km in the Earth.

    Inside the Earth, the rock is under unimaginably high pressure, up to
    several million times higher than normal atmospheric pressure. However, contrary to widespread belief, the Earth's mantle is not liquid, but
    solid. The rock behaves in a viscoplastic fashion: It moves centimeter by centimeter per year, but it would burst under a hammer blow. Nevertheless,
    the slow movements drive the Earth's crustal plates and tectonics,
    which in turn trigger volcanism.

    Chemical changes, for example, caused by water squeezed out of subducted crustal plates, can change the melting point of the rock in such a way
    that suddenly molten magma is formed. When this magma makes its way to
    the Earth's crust and to the surface, volcanic eruptions occur.

    Density of disordered materials No instrument in the world can penetrate
    the Earth's mantle to study such processes in detail. Therefore, one
    must rely on calculations, seismic signals and laboratory experiments to
    learn more about the Earth's interior. A diamond anvil cell can be used
    to generate the extremely high pressures and temperatures that prevail
    there. The samples explored in it are smaller than the tip of a pin. Their volume is in the sub nanoliter range (e.g. at least 10 million times
    smaller than 1 milliliter). When material is compressed under such high pressures, the internal structure changes. To analyze this precisely,
    X-rays are used on crystals to generate diffraction patterns. This
    allows conclusions to be drawn about the volume of the crystal lattice
    and thus also the density of the material. Non-crystalline materials,
    such as glasses or molten rocks, have so far kept their innermost secrets
    to themselves. This is because for disordered materials X-ray diffraction
    does not provide direct information on their volume and density.



    ========================================================================== Simple trick: measurement with laser instead of X-ray beam Using a simple trick, researchers led by Sergey Lobanov have now succeeded in measuring
    the refractive index and density of silicon dioxide (SiO2) glass, one of
    the most important materials in industry and geology, at pressures of
    up to 110 gigapascals. This is a pressure that prevails at a depth of
    more than 2,000 kilometers in the Earth's interior and is 1.1 million
    times higher than normal atmospheric pressure. The researchers used a multicolor laser to measure the brightness of its reflection from the pressurized sample. The brightness of the laser reflection contained information on the refractive index, a fundamental material property
    that describes how light slows down and bends as it travels through the material, but also the path length of the laser inside the sample.

    Materials with a high refractive index and density, such as diamonds
    and metals, typically appear bright and shiny to our eye. Instead of
    looking at the tiny samples with a naked eye, Lobanov and his colleagues
    used a powerful spectrometer to record changes in brightness at high
    pressure. These measurements yielded the refractive index of SiO2 glass
    and provided key information to quantify its density.

    Significance of the density measurement of glasses for the geosciences
    "Earth was a giant ball of molten rock 4.5 billion years ago. To
    understand how Earth has cooled and produced a solid mantle and
    crust, we need to know the physical properties of molten rocks at
    extreme pressure. However, studying melts at high pressure is extremely challenging and to circumvent some of these challenges geologists choose
    to study glasses instead of melts. Glasses are produced by quickly
    cooling hot but viscous melts. As a result, the structure of glasses
    often represents the structure of melts they were formed from.

    Previous measurements of glass density at high pressure required large
    and expensive synchrotron facilities that produce a tightly focused beam
    of X-rays that can be used to view the tiny sample in a diamond anvil
    cell. These were challenging experiments and only the densities of very
    few glasses have been measured to a pressure of 1 million atmospheres. We
    have now shown that the evolution of the sample volume and density of
    any transparent glass can be accurately measured up to pressures of
    at least 110 GPa using optical techniques," Lobanov says. "This can be
    done outside of synchrotron facilities and is therefore much easier and
    less costly. Our work thus paves the way to future studies of glasses
    that approximate Earth's present-day and long-gone melts. These future
    studies will provide new quantitative answers about the evolution of the
    early Earth as well as the driving forces behind volcanic eruptions."
    New possibilities for the investigation of non-crystalline, initially non- transparent solids Because the samples are extremely small and therefore ultra-thin, even materials that look like a lump of rock in large pieces
    become translucent.

    According to the researchers, these developments open up new possibilities
    for studying the mechanical and electronic properties of non-crystalline
    solids that appear nontransparent in larger volumes. According to the
    authors of the study, their findings have far-reaching implications
    for materials science and geophysics. In addition, this information
    could serve as a benchmark for computational studies of the transport properties of glasses and melts under extreme conditions.

    Lobanov emphasizes that this kind of study was only made possible
    by the collegial environment at the GFZ. He heads a Helmholtz Young Investigator Group called CLEAR in the "Chemistry and Physics of
    Geomaterials" section. "Our experimental capabilities to probe
    samples at high pressure is only one thing," says Lobanov, "at
    least as important were the discussions with colleagues in other
    sections, which helped me develop the ideas and implement them." ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by GFZ_GeoForschungsZentrum_Potsdam,_Helmholtz_Centre.

    Original written by Josef Zens. Note: Content may be edited for style
    and length.


    ========================================================================== Related Multimedia:
    * Equipment_and_SiO2_Glass ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Sergey S. Lobanov, Sergio Speziale, Bjo"rn Winkler, Victor Milman,
    Keith
    Refson, Lukas Schifferle. Electronic, Structural, and Mechanical
    Properties of SiO2 Glass at High Pressure Inferred from its
    Refractive Index. Physical Review Letters, 2022; 128 (7) DOI:
    10.1103/ PhysRevLett.128.077403 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/02/220218110733.htm

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