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NEWS
December 2023 ESRFnews
Core iron probed
of iron in a hexagonal close-packed
structure, known as ε-iron, which has
preferred crystalline orientations.
Studying εiron is tricky as during
compression from its initial body
centred cubic crystalline phase known
as αphase iron typically fractures
into numerous small crystals that
undergo plastic deformation Agnès
Dewaele of the University of Paris
Saclay and colleagues have avoided this
by heating αphase iron at constant
pressure until it reaches a facecentred
cubic or γphase The researchers
then pressurised this phase at constant
temperature before cooling at
constant pressure to achieve εiron
They characterised it by angular-
dispersive X-ray diffraction at the
ID27 beamline and inelastic scattering
at the ID28 beamline
Unlike previous studies on
powdered iron samples Dewaele
and colleagues data gave precise
estimations of the anisotropy
present in the elastic constants of
εiron qualitatively agreeing with
prior works that have identified the
direction with which waves propagate
most rapidly However there were
quantitative deviations from previous
data highlighting the importance of
their experimental approach Phys
Rev Lett 131 034101
ESRF users from France have
synthesised a single-crystalline
iron in the structure that it likely
assumes in Earths core Their Xray
measurements will help to hone
theories about why seismic waves
travel at different speeds through
the Earth
Seismology suggests that the
Earths core is solid in the middle
and liquid towards the outside It
also suggests that the structure is
anisotropic as seismic waves travel
faster in the polar direction than
in the equatorial direction One
explanation for this is that the solid
inner core is predominantly composed
S H U T T E R S T O C K/R O S T 9
“Researchers
characterised the
iron using
angular
dispersive Xray
diffraction at the
ID27 beamline
and inelastic
scattering at the
ID28 beamline