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남인혁

Nam, Inhyuk
Extreme Lasers and Exotic Plasmas Lab
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Demonstration of X-ray Thomson scattering as diagnostics for miscibility in warm dense matter

Author(s)
Frydrych, S.Vorberger, J.Hartley, N. J.Schuster, A. K.Ramakrishna, K.Saunders, A. M.van Driel, T.Falcone, R. W.Fletcher, L. B.Galtier, E.Gamboa, E. J.Glenzer, S. H.Granados, E.MacDonald, M. J.MacKinnon, A. J.McBride, E. E.Nam, InhyukNeumayer, P.Pak, A.Voigt, K.Roth, M.Sun, P.Gericke, D. O.Doppner, T.Kraus, D.
Issued Date
2020-05
DOI
10.1038/s41467-020-16426-y
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/86795
Citation
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, v.11, no.1, pp.2620
Abstract
The gas and ice giants in our solar system can be seen as a natural laboratory for the physics of highly compressed matter at temperatures up to thousands of kelvins. In turn, our understanding of their structure and evolution depends critically on our ability to model such matter. One key aspect is the miscibility of the elements in their interiors. Here, we demonstrate the feasibility of X-ray Thomson scattering to quantify the degree of species separation in a 1:1 carbon-hydrogen mixture at a pressure of similar to 150 GPa and a temperature of similar to 5000 K. Our measurements provide absolute values of the structure factor that encodes the microscopic arrangement of the particles. From these data, we find a lower limit of 24-7+6% of the carbon atoms forming isolated carbon clusters. In principle, this procedure can be employed for investigating the miscibility behaviour of any binary mixture at the high-pressure environment of planetary interiors, in particular, for non-crystalline samples where it is difficult to obtain conclusive results from X-ray diffraction. Moreover, this method will enable unprecedented measurements of mixing/demixing kinetics in dense plasma environments, e.g., induced by chemistry or hydrodynamic instabilities. It is challenging to reliably probe the miscibility behavior of elements in extreme conditions. Here, the authors use X-ray Thomson scattering and compare to the X-ray diffraction method in order to determine mixing of different atomic species in warm dense matter conditions.
Publisher
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
ISSN
2041-1723
Keyword
DIAMONDSHYDROGENHELIUMINITIO MOLECULAR-DYNAMICSTOTAL-ENERGY CALCULATIONS

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