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Static compression of iron‐silicon alloys: Implications for silicon in the Earth's core
Author(s) -
Lin JungFu,
Campbell Andrew J.,
Heinz Dion L.,
Shen Guoyin
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: solid earth
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/2002jb001978
Subject(s) - materials science , bulk modulus , silicon , diamond anvil cell , phase (matter) , inner core , analytical chemistry (journal) , crystallography , isothermal process , compressibility , diffraction , diamond , earth (classical element) , thermodynamics , metallurgy , high pressure , chemistry , composite material , mathematical physics , physics , organic chemistry , chromatography , optics
Three iron‐silicon alloys (Fe 85 Si 15 , Fe 71 Si 29 , and ε‐FeSi) have been studied in a diamond anvil cell at room temperature up to 55 GPa by in situ energy‐dispersive X‐ray diffraction techniques. A body centered cubic (bcc) to hexagonal close packed (hcp) phase transformation in Fe 85 Si 15 began at 16 GPa and was completed by 36 GPa. No phase transformations were observed in either Fe 71 Si 29 or ε‐FeSi at high pressures, even when laser‐heated to about 2000 K. The isothermal bulk modulus ( K 0 T ) of hcp‐Fe 85 Si 15 is 141 (±10) GPa with K ′ 0 T = 5.70(±0.60) and V 02 = 6.882(±0.031) cm 3 /mol (per molar atom). The K 0 T of Fe 71 Si 29 is 199.0 (±5.3) GPa with K ′ 0 T = 5.66(±0.61) and V 0 = 6.887(±0.014) cm 3 /mol, and the K 0 T of ε‐FeSi is 184.7 (±3.9) GPa with K ′ 0 T of 4.75 (±0.37) and V 0 = 6.790(±0.007) cm 3 /mol. Our study indicates that the substitution of Si into iron would lower the density of iron, but significantly changes its compressibility neither in the bcc phase, nor at high pressures in the hcp phase. Upon comparison with the Preliminary Reference Earth Model, the calculated equations of state (EOS) of hcp‐Fe 85 Si 15 , using the Mie‐Grüneisen EOS, indicate that an outer core containing about 8–10 wt.% Si and inner core containing about 4 wt.% Si in iron would satisfy the seismological constraints. Addition of silicon into iron increases the bulk sound velocity of iron, consistent with silicon being a light element in the Earth's core.

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