MR13C-2730
Reflectivities of Four Shock-Compressed Alkali Halides
Monday, 14 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Matthew R Diamond, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, United States
Abstract:
Laser-shock compression on four alkali halides has been used to probe the transition from insulating to metallic states, a high-pressure transition in chemical bonding that has fundamental implications for planetary formation and structure. Collectively, pressures up to 450 GPa and densities up to three-fold compression were explored across a total of fourteen single-crystal samples of CsI, CsBr, KBr and NaCl. Velocity interferometry was used to record shock velocities and reflectivities at 532 nm during decaying shock compression. The data show up to 40% (or higher) reflectivity, corresponding to notable electrical conductivities, in response to high pressures and temperatures. Furthermore, band-gap closure, dependent on density, can be examined from the reflectivity data. Ionic salts are simple model systems amenable to first-principles theory and serve as analog materials for predicting whether specific chemical constituents can reside in the rocky mantles or metallic cores of planets. A key objective is to disentangle the complementary roles of temperature and compression in transforming ionic into metallic bonding. Furthermore, at high pressures CsI becomes analogous to Xe: they are isoelectronic and follow matching equations of state. Therefore, studies on CsI could inform understanding of noble-gas geochemistry at conditions deep inside planets.