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Disordered Aragonite: The New High-Pressure, High-Temperature Phase of CaCO3. / Gavryushkin, Pavel N.; Sagatov, Nursultan; Belonoshko, Anatoly B. et al.

In: Journal of Physical Chemistry C, Vol. 124, No. 48, 03.12.2020, p. 26467–26473.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Gavryushkin, PN, Sagatov, N, Belonoshko, AB, Banaev, MV & Litasov, KD 2020, 'Disordered Aragonite: The New High-Pressure, High-Temperature Phase of CaCO3', Journal of Physical Chemistry C, vol. 124, no. 48, pp. 26467–26473. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcc.0c08309

APA

Gavryushkin, P. N., Sagatov, N., Belonoshko, A. B., Banaev, M. V., & Litasov, K. D. (2020). Disordered Aragonite: The New High-Pressure, High-Temperature Phase of CaCO3. Journal of Physical Chemistry C, 124(48), 26467–26473. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcc.0c08309

Vancouver

Gavryushkin PN, Sagatov N, Belonoshko AB, Banaev MV, Litasov KD. Disordered Aragonite: The New High-Pressure, High-Temperature Phase of CaCO3. Journal of Physical Chemistry C. 2020 Dec 3;124(48):26467–26473. Epub 2020 Dec 3. doi: 10.1021/acs.jpcc.0c08309

Author

Gavryushkin, Pavel N. ; Sagatov, Nursultan ; Belonoshko, Anatoly B. et al. / Disordered Aragonite: The New High-Pressure, High-Temperature Phase of CaCO3. In: Journal of Physical Chemistry C. 2020 ; Vol. 124, No. 48. pp. 26467–26473.

BibTeX

@article{ff6d4771938445f2b4a69e0389eb5df5,
title = "Disordered Aragonite: The New High-Pressure, High-Temperature Phase of CaCO3",
abstract = "Phases of CaCO3 stabilized at high pressures and temperatures are the potential agents of the global carbon cycle, transferring oxidized carbon in deep Earth's interiors and thus are of special interest for the Earth sciences. Here, we report finding of the new phase, named disarag, which is dynamically disordered aragonite with freely rotating CO3 groups, similar to that in the CaCO3-V phase with a calcite-like structure. Disarag has a stability field expanding from 3 to 10 GPa and from 1600 to 2000 K. Consideration of twinned structure enlarges this field, decreasing the transition temperature from aragonite to disarag at 100-300 K. At P-T parameters corresponding to the transition from aragonite to disarag, the marked disappearance of the diffraction peaks is observed in in situ experiments. We show that, among known phases of CaCO3, disarag is the best candidate for the explanation of this reconstruction of diffraction pattern. Also, for the first time, using ab initio molecular dynamics technique, we determine equilibrium curves between calcite and its disordered phases CaCO3-IV and CaCO3-V. We show that the transitions of alkaline-earth carbonates CaCO3, SrCO3, and BaCO3 to the disordered states start when the critical angle of librations of the CO3 group about the axis perpendicular to the molecular three-fold axis exceeds 45°. The calcite-like structure of CaCO3 is characterized by more intense librations than the aragonite-like structure of this compound and reaches the critical angle at lower temperatures. As a result, calcite transforms into the disordered state at lower temperatures than aragonite. ",
author = "Gavryushkin, {Pavel N.} and Nursultan Sagatov and Belonoshko, {Anatoly B.} and Banaev, {Maksim V.} and Litasov, {Konstantin D.}",
note = "Funding Information: The study was funded by the RFBR according to the research project #18-35-20047. Part of the work on the simulation of the disordered phase of calcite was also supported by the state assignment project of IGM SB RAS. A.B.B is supported by the Swedish Scientific Council research grant “Mineral Physics of the Earth Core”. A.B.B. also acknowledges HSE support. The computations were performed using resources provided by the SNIC through the National Supercomputer Center at Link{\"o}ping Technical University (Sweden) and by the Novosibirsk State University Supercomputer Center (Russia). Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright}2020 American Chemical Society. Copyright: Copyright 2020 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.",
year = "2020",
month = dec,
day = "3",
doi = "10.1021/acs.jpcc.0c08309",
language = "English",
volume = "124",
pages = "26467–26473",
journal = "Journal of Physical Chemistry C",
issn = "1932-7447",
publisher = "American Chemical Society",
number = "48",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Disordered Aragonite: The New High-Pressure, High-Temperature Phase of CaCO3

AU - Gavryushkin, Pavel N.

AU - Sagatov, Nursultan

AU - Belonoshko, Anatoly B.

AU - Banaev, Maksim V.

AU - Litasov, Konstantin D.

N1 - Funding Information: The study was funded by the RFBR according to the research project #18-35-20047. Part of the work on the simulation of the disordered phase of calcite was also supported by the state assignment project of IGM SB RAS. A.B.B is supported by the Swedish Scientific Council research grant “Mineral Physics of the Earth Core”. A.B.B. also acknowledges HSE support. The computations were performed using resources provided by the SNIC through the National Supercomputer Center at Linköping Technical University (Sweden) and by the Novosibirsk State University Supercomputer Center (Russia). Publisher Copyright: ©2020 American Chemical Society. Copyright: Copyright 2020 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.

PY - 2020/12/3

Y1 - 2020/12/3

N2 - Phases of CaCO3 stabilized at high pressures and temperatures are the potential agents of the global carbon cycle, transferring oxidized carbon in deep Earth's interiors and thus are of special interest for the Earth sciences. Here, we report finding of the new phase, named disarag, which is dynamically disordered aragonite with freely rotating CO3 groups, similar to that in the CaCO3-V phase with a calcite-like structure. Disarag has a stability field expanding from 3 to 10 GPa and from 1600 to 2000 K. Consideration of twinned structure enlarges this field, decreasing the transition temperature from aragonite to disarag at 100-300 K. At P-T parameters corresponding to the transition from aragonite to disarag, the marked disappearance of the diffraction peaks is observed in in situ experiments. We show that, among known phases of CaCO3, disarag is the best candidate for the explanation of this reconstruction of diffraction pattern. Also, for the first time, using ab initio molecular dynamics technique, we determine equilibrium curves between calcite and its disordered phases CaCO3-IV and CaCO3-V. We show that the transitions of alkaline-earth carbonates CaCO3, SrCO3, and BaCO3 to the disordered states start when the critical angle of librations of the CO3 group about the axis perpendicular to the molecular three-fold axis exceeds 45°. The calcite-like structure of CaCO3 is characterized by more intense librations than the aragonite-like structure of this compound and reaches the critical angle at lower temperatures. As a result, calcite transforms into the disordered state at lower temperatures than aragonite.

AB - Phases of CaCO3 stabilized at high pressures and temperatures are the potential agents of the global carbon cycle, transferring oxidized carbon in deep Earth's interiors and thus are of special interest for the Earth sciences. Here, we report finding of the new phase, named disarag, which is dynamically disordered aragonite with freely rotating CO3 groups, similar to that in the CaCO3-V phase with a calcite-like structure. Disarag has a stability field expanding from 3 to 10 GPa and from 1600 to 2000 K. Consideration of twinned structure enlarges this field, decreasing the transition temperature from aragonite to disarag at 100-300 K. At P-T parameters corresponding to the transition from aragonite to disarag, the marked disappearance of the diffraction peaks is observed in in situ experiments. We show that, among known phases of CaCO3, disarag is the best candidate for the explanation of this reconstruction of diffraction pattern. Also, for the first time, using ab initio molecular dynamics technique, we determine equilibrium curves between calcite and its disordered phases CaCO3-IV and CaCO3-V. We show that the transitions of alkaline-earth carbonates CaCO3, SrCO3, and BaCO3 to the disordered states start when the critical angle of librations of the CO3 group about the axis perpendicular to the molecular three-fold axis exceeds 45°. The calcite-like structure of CaCO3 is characterized by more intense librations than the aragonite-like structure of this compound and reaches the critical angle at lower temperatures. As a result, calcite transforms into the disordered state at lower temperatures than aragonite.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85097867913&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1021/acs.jpcc.0c08309

DO - 10.1021/acs.jpcc.0c08309

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85097867913

VL - 124

SP - 26467

EP - 26473

JO - Journal of Physical Chemistry C

JF - Journal of Physical Chemistry C

SN - 1932-7447

IS - 48

ER -

ID: 27119146