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Extreme Pressure Causes Osmium To Change State Of Matter - Science/Technology - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumScience/TechnologyExtreme Pressure Causes Osmium To Change State Of Matter (834 Views)

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Extreme Pressure Causes Osmium To Change State Of Matter by frankg1(op): 3:57pm On Sep 12, 2015
Using metallic osmium (Os) in experimentation, an international group of researchers have demonstrated that ultra-high pressures cause core electrons to interplay, which results in experimentally observed anomalies in the compression behavior of the material. Os is one of Earth's most exceptional elemental materials, possessing the highest known density at ambient pressure, one of the highest cohesive energies and melting temperatures, and an incompressibility that is almost comparable to that of diamond. Researchers believe that the ability to affect core electrons – which do not participate in chemical bonding – in metals like osmium will open new opportunities in the search for new states of matter and the synthesis of materials with unique properties that do not exist at ambient conditions. "The international research team employed extreme conditions that generated a measurable change in osmium's high pressure behavior," said Vitali Prakapenka, a scientist at the University of Chicago's GeoSoilEnviros Center for Advanced Radiation Sources (GSECARS) beamline at the Advanced Photon Source (APS), a U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Office of Science User Facility at DOE's Argonne National Laboratory. "Although the theoretically predicted electronic transition that involves pressure- induced interaction between core (inner) electrons is much weaker than typical structural changes associated with valence (outer) electrons, we were able to detect experimentally changes in properties of this highly-compressed material which are related to the predicted phenomenon," said Leonid Dubrovinsky of the Bayerisches Geoinstitut (BGI) at Bayreuth University in Germany. "We used micro-anvils made of super hard nano-diamond to generate 770 gigapascals of pressure (more than 7 million of atmospheres, i.e. twice that of the center of the Earth) on the osmium sample," BGI's Natalia Dubrovinskaia said. The device for generating ultra-high static pressures – a two-stage diamond anvil cell – was developed by Dubrovinsky and Dubrovinskaia, who published this research technique in 2012. A schematic of the pressure chamber of the double-stage diamond anvil cell (dsDAC) for ultra-high pressure generation and a photo of a DAC produced at BGI. Semi-balls made of nanocrystalline diamond of extraordinary strength are attached to the culets of the opposed gem quality diamonds of the DAC. A sample of osmium, shown as a small red dot on the top of the lower semi-ball, has a size of ca. 3 microns. It is compressed between the tips of the semi-balls, which are supported by a pressure-medium (solidified inert gases or paraffin) filling the pressure chamber of the DAC. Ultra-high pressure is generated on the sample due to the two-stage exertion of a big force on a very small area. The diameter of the semi-balls is about 10 microns. The diameter of culets of the diamonds, to which the semi- balls are attached, is 250 microns. Credit: Elena Bykova, University of Bayreuth "Measuring the effect of ultra-high pressure required very accurate structural X-ray diffraction experiments to reveal the anomalous behavior of the lattice parameters upon compression," Prakapenka said. "We used state-of-the-art synchrotron techniques capable of penetrating bulky pressure vessels to probe tiny samples with a typical size of around 1-4 microns. We have used a very intense tightly focused high-energy X-ray beam that is only available at third-generation synchrotron facilities." The research is detailed in the paper "The most incompressible metal osmium at static pressure above 750 gigapascals," published in Nature .
Re: Extreme Pressure Causes Osmium To Change State Of Matter by IamAtribalist: 4:01pm On Sep 12, 2015
Pressure induced Phase Transition techniques are very common in Solid State research.
Re: Extreme Pressure Causes Osmium To Change State Of Matter by frankg1(op): 4:08pm On Sep 12, 2015
IamAtribalist:
Pressure induced Phase Transition techniques are very common in Solid State research.
Phase u say. Not state of matter
Re: Extreme Pressure Causes Osmium To Change State Of Matter by IamAtribalist: 4:16pm On Sep 12, 2015
frankg1:
Phase u say. Not state of matter
Same thing. You've heard of the '3' PHASE of matter - solid, liquid and gas. In actuality there is also the PLASMA phase.
Re: Extreme Pressure Causes Osmium To Change State Of Matter by frankg1(op): 4:30pm On Sep 12, 2015
IamAtribalist:
Same thing. You've heard of the '3' PHASE of matter - solid, liquid and gas. In actuality there is also the PLASMA phase.
I believe dey r quite different and misinterpreted in nigeria.

A phase is a region with uniform chemical
and physical properties and is separated by
distinguishable boundaries.
• States of matter are the forms in which
different phases can exist. Solid, liquid and gas
are the most common states of matter on
earth.
• In one state of matter, many forms of phases
can exist. For example consider the bottle with
gasoline and water. Both are in a liquid state,
but in different phases. The same concept can
be applied to solids, though the gasses tend to
violate this, but not explicitly.
Re: Extreme Pressure Causes Osmium To Change State Of Matter by IamAtribalist: 6:17pm On Sep 12, 2015
frankg1:
I believe dey r quite different and misinterpreted in nigeria.

A phase is a region with uniform chemical
and physical properties and is separated by
distinguishable boundaries.
• States of matter are the forms in which
different phases can exist. Solid, liquid and gas
are the most common states of matter on
earth.
• In one state of matter, many forms of phases
can exist. For example consider the bottle with
gasoline and water. Both are in a liquid state,
but in different phases. The same concept can
be applied to solids, though the gasses tend to
violate this, but not explicitly.
I think you are right.
1 Reply

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