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JOURNALS // Pis'ma v Zhurnal Èksperimental'noi i Teoreticheskoi Fiziki // Archive

Pis'ma v Zh. Èksper. Teoret. Fiz., 2022 Volume 116, Issue 11, Pages 779–792 (Mi jetpl6816)

This article is cited in 3 papers

CONDENSED MATTER

Synthesis and magnetic properties of iron polyhydrides at megabar pressures

A. G. Gavriliukabc, V. V. Struzhkind, S. N. Aksenovc, A. G. Ivanovaca, A. A. Mironovichc, I. A. Troyanabc, I. S. Lyubutina

a Shubnikov Institute of Crystallography, Federal Scientific Research Centre Crystallography and Photonics, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, 119333 Russia
b Immanuel Kant Baltic Federal University, Kaliningrad, 236041 Russia
c Institute for Nuclear Research, Russian Academy of Sciences, Troitsk, Moscow, 108840 Russia
d Center for High Pressure Science and Technology Advanced Research (HPSTAR), Pudong, 201203 Shanghai, People’s Republic of China

Abstract: Iron polyhydrides have been synthesized at pressures of 77–157 GPa and temperatures up to 2000 K by the laser heating of an iron–borazane (ammonia borane NH$_3$BH$_3$) sample in diamond anvil cells. X-ray spectra of the synthesized products indicate the formation of several FeHx phases, in which (in two cells) reflections of FeH $_{2}$ iron hydride with the tetragonal $I4/mmm$ phase are reliably detected. The magnetic and electronic properties of FeHx compounds have been studied by nuclear forward scattering spectroscopy on Fe-57 nuclei at high pressures in the temperature range of 4–300 K in external magnetic fields up to 5 T. The nuclear forward scattering data indicate at least seven FeHx compounds with very different electronic and magnetic properties. The Néel temperature TN determined for the FeH$_2$ phase at a pressure of 82 GPa is about 174 K. One of the striking results is the observation of the FeHx phase remaining magnetically ordered at a pressure of 128 GPa in the entire temperature range of 4–300 K. Such a high pressure is characteristic of the boundary between the lower mantle and the outer core of the Earth. The existence of a magnetic phase of an iron compound at such a record high pressure is unique and has not yet been observed.

Received: 04.10.2022
Revised: 21.10.2022
Accepted: 21.10.2022

DOI: 10.31857/S1234567822230070


 English version:
Journal of Experimental and Theoretical Physics Letters, 2022, 116:11, 804–816


© Steklov Math. Inst. of RAS, 2024