The crystal-structure and the high-pressure behavior of a natural cubic melanophlogite (Sp. Gr. Pm3n at room-conditions), a type-I SiO2 clathrate containing only methane as guest gas, was investigated by X-ray single-crystal diffraction at room-conditions and in situ high-pressure synchrotron powder diffraction with a diamond anvil cell and methanol:ethanol:water = 16:3:1 (MEW) mixture and silicon-oil (Si-oil) as pressure transmitting media up to about 6 GPa. A cubic-to-tetragonal phase-transition was observed at P 1.14 GPa, in both MEW and Si-oil runs. The tetragonal polymorph is stable up to the highest pressure in the run with MEW, but it switches back to cubic symmetry at P > 3.12 GPa in Si-oil. The different elastic behavior is ascribable to the non-hydrostatic conditions in Si-oil medium at P > 1 GPa. The elastic behavior of melanophlogite was described fitting the P–V data with a Birch–Murnaghan Equation-of-State, showing similar bulk modulus values for the low-pressure cubic and high-pressure tetragonal phases [i.e. K0,L-cub = 23.4(2.4), K0,tetr = 22.2(9)]. The spontaneous strain for the cubic-to-tetragonal transition is almost completely governed by a compression along the c axis, with negligible contribution along a. An inverse behavior is found with respect to the tetragonal-to-cubic high-temperature phase-transition previously described for Mt. Hamilton melanophlogite. A Landau fit of the spontaneous strain (εss), related to the order parameter (Q) of the transition as εss ∝ Q, showed a first-order character of the P-induced phase-transition and a Pc = 1.2(3) GPa. Symmetry breaking spontaneous strain prevails respect to the volume strain, which is however present and significant.

A high-pressure cubic-to-tetragonal phase-transition in melanophlogite, a SiO2 clathrate phase / M. Tribaudino, G.D. Gatta, L. Yongjae. - In: MICROPOROUS AND MESOPOROUS MATERIALS. - ISSN 1387-1811. - 129:1-2(2010 Apr), pp. 267-273.

A high-pressure cubic-to-tetragonal phase-transition in melanophlogite, a SiO2 clathrate phase

G.D. Gatta
Secondo
;
2010

Abstract

The crystal-structure and the high-pressure behavior of a natural cubic melanophlogite (Sp. Gr. Pm3n at room-conditions), a type-I SiO2 clathrate containing only methane as guest gas, was investigated by X-ray single-crystal diffraction at room-conditions and in situ high-pressure synchrotron powder diffraction with a diamond anvil cell and methanol:ethanol:water = 16:3:1 (MEW) mixture and silicon-oil (Si-oil) as pressure transmitting media up to about 6 GPa. A cubic-to-tetragonal phase-transition was observed at P 1.14 GPa, in both MEW and Si-oil runs. The tetragonal polymorph is stable up to the highest pressure in the run with MEW, but it switches back to cubic symmetry at P > 3.12 GPa in Si-oil. The different elastic behavior is ascribable to the non-hydrostatic conditions in Si-oil medium at P > 1 GPa. The elastic behavior of melanophlogite was described fitting the P–V data with a Birch–Murnaghan Equation-of-State, showing similar bulk modulus values for the low-pressure cubic and high-pressure tetragonal phases [i.e. K0,L-cub = 23.4(2.4), K0,tetr = 22.2(9)]. The spontaneous strain for the cubic-to-tetragonal transition is almost completely governed by a compression along the c axis, with negligible contribution along a. An inverse behavior is found with respect to the tetragonal-to-cubic high-temperature phase-transition previously described for Mt. Hamilton melanophlogite. A Landau fit of the spontaneous strain (εss), related to the order parameter (Q) of the transition as εss ∝ Q, showed a first-order character of the P-induced phase-transition and a Pc = 1.2(3) GPa. Symmetry breaking spontaneous strain prevails respect to the volume strain, which is however present and significant.
Clathrate; Compressibility; High-pressure; Melanophlogite; Phase-transition
Settore GEO/06 - Mineralogia
Settore GEO/09 - Georisorse Miner.Appl.Mineral.-Petrogr.per l'amb.e i Beni Cul
apr-2010
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/141729
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