| Literature DB >> 31347883 |
A L Coleman1,2, M G Gorman1,2, R Briggs1,2, R S McWilliams1, D McGonegle3, C A Bolme4, A E Gleason4,5, D E Fratanduono2, R F Smith2, E Galtier6, H J Lee6, B Nagler6, E Granados6, G W Collins7, J H Eggert2, J S Wark3, M I McMahon1.
Abstract
Ultrafast x-ray diffraction at the LCLS x-ray free electron laser has been used to resolve the structural behavior of antimony under shock compression to 59 GPa. Antimony is seen to transform to the incommensurate, host-guest phase Sb-II at ∼11 GPa, which forms on nanosecond timescales with ordered guest-atom chains. The high-pressure bcc phase Sb-III is observed above ∼15 GPa, some 8 GPa lower than in static compression studies, and mixed Sb-III/liquid diffraction are obtained between 38 and 59 GPa. An additional phase which does not exist under static compression, Sb-I^{'}, is also observed between 8 and 12 GPa, beyond the normal stability field of Sb-I, and resembles Sb-I with a resolved Peierls distortion. The incommensurate Sb-II high-pressure phase can be recovered metastably on release to ambient pressure, where it is stable for more than 10 ns.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31347883 DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.122.255704
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phys Rev Lett ISSN: 0031-9007 Impact factor: 9.161