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남인혁

Nam, Inhyuk
Extreme Lasers and Exotic Plasmas Lab
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Measurement of diamond nucleation rates from hydrocarbons at conditions comparable to the interiors of icy giant planets

Author(s)
Schuster, A. K.Hartley, N. J.Vorberger, J.Doppner, T.van Driel, T.Falcone, R. W.Fletcher, L. B.Frydrych, S.Galtier, E.Gamboa, E. J.Gericke, D. O.Glenzer, S. H.Granados, E.MacDonald, M. J.MacKinnon, A. J.McBride, E. E.Nam, InhyukNeumayer, P.Pak, A.Prencipe, IVoigt, K.Saunders, A. M.Sun, P.Kraus, D.
Issued Date
2020-02
DOI
10.1103/PhysRevB.101.054301
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/86797
Citation
PHYSICAL REVIEW B, v.101, no.5, pp.054301
Abstract
We present measurements of the nucleation rate into a diamond lattice in dynamically compressed polystyrene obtained in a pump-probe experiment using a high-energy laser system and in situ femtosecond x-ray diffraction. Different temperature-pressure conditions that occur in planetary interiors were probed. For a single shock reaching 70 GPa and 3000 K no diamond formation was observed, while with a double shock driving polystyrene to pressures around 150 GPa and temperatures around 5000 K nucleation rates between 10(29) and 10(34) m(-3) s(-1) were recorded. These nucleation rates do not agree with predictions of the state-of-the-art theoretical models for carbon-hydrogen mixtures by many orders of magnitude. Our data suggest that there is significant diamond formation to be expected inside icy giant planets like Neptune and Uranus.
Publisher
AMER PHYSICAL SOC
ISSN
2469-9950
Keyword
INITIO MOLECULAR-DYNAMICSTOTAL-ENERGY CALCULATIONSTRANSITION

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