2015
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1502363112
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Melting of iron determined by X-ray absorption spectroscopy to 100 GPa

Abstract: Temperature, thermal history, and dynamics of Earth rely critically on the knowledge of the melting temperature of iron at the pressure conditions of the inner core boundary (ICB) where the geotherm crosses the melting curve. The literature on this subject is overwhelming, and no consensus has been reached, with a very large disagreement of the order of 2,000 K for the ICB temperature. Here we report new data on the melting temperature of iron in a laser-heated diamond anvil cell to 103 GPa obtained by X-ray a… Show more

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Cited by 71 publications
(86 citation statements)
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References 29 publications
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“…1 (3,500 K, 170 GPa). All other studies are extrapolating data from lower pressures in the 80-to 100-GPa range (4,26,27,39). This is also in very good agreement with the results of our picosecond X-ray diffraction experiments made on single-crystal iron and shown in Supporting Information.…”
Section: Significancesupporting
confidence: 90%
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“…1 (3,500 K, 170 GPa). All other studies are extrapolating data from lower pressures in the 80-to 100-GPa range (4,26,27,39). This is also in very good agreement with the results of our picosecond X-ray diffraction experiments made on single-crystal iron and shown in Supporting Information.…”
Section: Significancesupporting
confidence: 90%
“…Therefore, because of this geophysical interest, its phase diagram under high pressure and temperature has been extensively studied by static (1)(2)(3)(4) or dynamic (5-9) compression techniques. In particular, the determination of its melting curve at the Earth's inner−outer core boundary constrains the thermodynamics that governs Earth's heat budget and dynamics such as the heat flux from the core to the mantle, the power available for the geodynamo, and the planetary cooling rate (10).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Very little can be found on the structure of liquid 3d, 4d or 5d metals, although much attention is being devoted to the calculation or measurement of melting curves in these systems (Anzellini et al, 2013;Aquilanti et al, 2015). Due to strong directional bonding arising from an incomplete d-electron valence band, atoms are not 'spherical' and compression of liquid d-metals could produce interesting non-uniform effects on the local structure.…”
Section: Example Of Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The mean square thermal displacement of atoms (Lamb-Mössbauer factor) can be measured as a function of temperature, providing a plot for determining the onset of melting [301,312]. Synchrotron x-ray absorption has also been successfully used for melting identification [141,473].…”
Section: High Pressure Meltingmentioning
confidence: 99%