High pressure metal-silicate partitioning of Ni, Co, V, Cr, Si, and O, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (2015), doi: http://dx.High pressure metal-silicate partitioning of Ni, Co, V, Cr, Si, and O AbstractThe distributions of major and minor elements in Earth's core and mantle were primarily established by high pressure, high temperature metal-silicate partitioning during core segregation. The partitioning behaviors of moderately siderophile elements can be used to constrain the pressure-temperature conditions of core formation and the 2 core's composition. We performed experiments to study the partitioning of Ni, Co, V, Cr, Si, and O between silicate melt and Fe-rich metallic melt in a multianvil press and diamond anvil cell, up to 100 GPa and 5700 K. Combining our new results with data from 18 previous studies, we parameterized the effects of pressure, temperature, and metallic melt composition on partitioning. Ni and Co partitioning are insensitive to composition. At low pressures, these elements become less siderophile with increasing temperature, with this trend reversing above ~45 GPa. V and Cr partitioning are much more sensitive to metallic melt composition and less sensitive to pressure. Partitioning of Si and O are insensitive to pressure, but with strong and moderate temperature dependences, respectively. Our new parameterizations of Ni and Co partitioning suggest that the Earth's distributions of these elements can be matched by single-stage coremantle equilibration at 54 ± 5 GPa and 3300-3400 K. These conditions would result in 8.5 ± 1.4 wt% Si and 1.6 ± 0.3 wt% O in the core, compatible with the core's measured density. However, this single-stage model matches the Earth's V and Cr distributions less well. We also incorporated our parameterizations into models of multi-stage core formation over evolving pressure-temperature-oxygen fugacity conditions, reproducing the Earth's Ni and Co distributions while simultaneously producing a core whose light element composition is consistent with its density.
Single crystals of novel orthorhombic (space group Pnnm) iron tetraboride FeB4 were synthesized at pressures above 8 GPa and high temperatures. Magnetic susceptibility and heat capacity measurements demonstrate bulk superconductivity below 2.9 K. The putative isotope effect on the superconducting critical temperature and the analysis of specific heat data indicate that the superconductivity in FeB4 is likely phonon mediated, which is rare for Fe-based superconductors. The discovered iron tetraboride is highly incompressible and has the nanoindentation hardness of 62(5) GPa; thus, it opens a new class of highly desirable materials combining advanced mechanical properties and superconductivity.
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