Structural behavior of silicate liquids and glasses under extreme conditions by using synchrotron X-ray diffraction and Raman spectroscopy
POSTER
Abstract
The behavior of silicate melts under high-pressure and high-temperature conditions is of primary interest in the field of geophysical, chemical, material science, and technological glass process industry, both for their fundamental properties and for their significant roles in thermal transport and chemical differentiation within Earth and other terrestrial planetary interiors. Recently, considerable progress has been achieved in understanding the structural differentiation of liquid and glass silicates by both theoretical predictions and various spectroscopic experiments, yet still many issues are puzzling and several challenges must be overcome to expand our understanding of silicate liquids and glasses. Here, we report spectroscopic properties of enstatite (MgSiO3), wollastonite (CaSiO3), diopside (CaMgSi2O6) and silica (SiO2). The local atomic structure of various silicates has been studied using synchrotron angle-dispersive X-ray diffraction combined with a multi-channel collimator. Atomic pair distribution functions (PDFs) were obtained from the X-ray data. Also, we have obtained the local vibrational modes by using Raman spectroscopy, providing additional structural information that cannot be obtained by X-ray diffraction.
*This project is supported by NSF EAR-1620548
Presenters
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Young Jay Ryu
- Center for Advanced Radiation Source, University of Chicago