Published May 18, 2024
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Exploring toroidal anvil profiles for larger sample volumes above 4 Mbar
Creators
- 1. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
- 2. Carnegie Institution for Science
- 3. University of Chicago
Description
With the advent of toroidal and double-stage diamond anvil cells (DACs), pressures between 4 and 10 Mbar can be achieved under static compression, however, the ability to explore diverse sample assemblies is limited on these micron-scale anvils. Adapting the toroidal DAC to support larger sample volumes offers expanded capabilities in physics, chemistry, and planetary science: including, characterizing materials in soft pressure media to multi-megabar pressures, synthesizing novel phases, and probing planetary assemblages at the interior pressures and temperatures of super-Earths and sub-Neptunes. Here we have continued the exploration of larger toroidal DAC profiles by iteratively testing various torus and shoulder depths with central culet diameters in the 30–50 µm range. We present a 30 µm culet profile that reached a maximum pressure of 414(1) GPa based on a Pt scale. The 300 K equations of state fit to our P–V data collected on gold and rhenium are compatible with extrapolated hydrostatic equations of state within 1% up to 4 Mbar. This work validates the performance of these large-culet toroidal anvils to > 4 Mbar and provides a promising foundation to develop toroidal DACs for diverse sample loading and laser heating.
Data availability
The data used to obtain the results and conclusions presented in this work are provided in the main and supplemental texts S1 as well in Supplemental Datasets S1, S2 and S3. Additional data related to this paper may be provided upon request to the corresponding authors.Files
Exploring-toroidal-anvil-profiles-for-larger-sample-volumes-above-4-Mbar.pdf
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Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1038/s41598-024-61861-2
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:11862
Funding
- U.S. Department of Energy
- DE-AC52-07NA27344
- National Science Foundation
- EAR-1619868
- National Science Foundation
- EAR-2022492