| Literature DB >> 29184152 |
Christopher Weis1, Christian Sternemann2, Valerio Cerantola3, Christoph J Sahle3, Georg Spiekermann4,5, Manuel Harder5, Yury Forov2, Alexander Kononov2, Robin Sakrowski2, Hasan Yavaş5, Metin Tolan2, Max Wilke4.
Abstract
Iron-bearing carbonates are candidate phases for carbon storage in the deep Earth and may play an important role for the Earth's carbon cycle. To elucidate the properties of carbonates at conditions of the deep Earth, we investigated the pressure driven magnetic high spin to low spin transition of synthetic siderite FeCO3 and magnesiosiderite (Mg0.74Fe0.26)CO3 single crystals for pressures up to 57 GPa using diamond anvil cells and x-ray Raman scattering spectroscopy to directly probe the iron 3d electron configuration. An extremely sharp transition for siderite single crystal occurs at a notably low pressure of 40.4 ± 0.1 GPa with a transition width of 0.7 GPa when using the very soft pressure medium helium. In contrast, we observe a broadening of the transition width to 4.4 GPa for siderite with a surprising additional shift of the transition pressure to 44.3 ± 0.4 GPa when argon is used as pressure medium. The difference is assigned to larger pressure gradients in case of argon. For magnesiosiderite loaded with argon, the transition occurs at 44.8 ± 0.8 GPa showing similar width as siderite. Hence, no compositional effect on the spin transition pressure is observed. The spectra measured within the spin crossover regime indicate coexistence of regions of pure high- and low-spin configuration within the single crystal.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29184152 PMCID: PMC5705641 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-16733-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Imaging properties of XRS and data extraction. (a) Schematic sketch of the scattering geometry for the high pressure XRS measurements. The inelastically scattered photons from each point of the x-ray beam path through sample and diamond are analyzed and focused onto different positions on the 2D detector. (b) XRS spectra for energy losses at the iron M2,3-edge obtained from a single pixel analysis along the beam path. Spectra A and B show the signal of the diamond before the sample, curves C and D contain contributions from diamond and sample and spectrum E shows the signal of the diamond behind the sample, which is partly masked by the gasket. (c) Summed signals for selected pixels which contain the background signal only (red, B) and spectra from pixel that contain sample and background signal (blue, summation of pixel C & D). The black solid line indicates the smoothed background signal. (d) Extracted XRS M2,3-edge after subtraction of the smoothed background.
Figure 2(a) Iron L2,3-edge XRS spectra measured at low momentum transfer (3.2 ± 0.9 Å−1) with helium as pressure medium. The data for 2.4 GPa and 40.4 GPa have been published in[41]. References for Fe2+ L2,3-edge spectra of a [Fe(tren(py))3]2+ measured by means of soft x-ray absorption for the high and low spin state taken from[42] are shown as solid lines. In situ XRS spectra of M2,3-edges of siderite single crystal as a function of pressure using helium (b) and argon (c) as pressure medium (12.7 ± 0.2 Å−1). Siderite powder was measured at ambient pressures enclosed in a DAC as a reference without pressure medium. (d) Iron XRS M2,3-edges of magnesiosiderite (Mg0.74 Fe0.26)CO3 single crystal (dots with errorbars) and magnesium XRS L2,3-edges of magnesite powder (solid lines).
Figure 3Left: Total spin momentum S as a function of pressure for all the spectra shown in Fig. 2. The grey shaded area (40–46 GPa) represents the coexistence regime of high- and low-spin iron revealed by Spivak et al.[35]. Right: Photographs of the siderite sample and ruby sphere position in the sample chamber for measurements with argon in the LS state and for measurements with helium in the LS and HS state.
Figure 4(a,b) Modeled siderite M2,3-edge (45.6 GPa) and L2,3-edge (40.4 GPa) measured within the spin crossover regime using a superposition of HS and LS reference spectra via component fit. (c) LS contribution to the component fits compared with the course of the spin transition as shown in Fig. 3.