Crystalline-amorphous transition in silicate perovskites

Mahin Hemmati, Andrew Chizmeshya, George H. Wolf, Peter H. Poole, Jun Shao, and C. Austen Angell
Phys. Rev. B 51, 14841 – Published 1 June 1995
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Abstract

CaSiO3 and MgSiO3 perovskites are known to undergo solid-state crystal to amorphous transitions near ambient pressure when decompressed from their high-pressure stability fields. In order to elucidate the mechanistic aspects of this transition we have performed detailed molecular-dynamics simulations and lattice-dynamical calculations on model silicate perovskite systems using empirical rigid-ion pair potentials. In the simulations at low temperatures, the model perovskite systems transform under tension to a low-density glass composed of corner shared chains of tetrahedral silicon. The amorphization is initiated by a thermally activated step involving a soft polar optic mode in the perovskite phase at the Brillouin zone center. Progression of the system along this reaction coordinate triggers, in succession, multiple barrierless modes of instability ultimately producing a catastrophic decohesion of the lattice. An important intermediary along the reaction path is a crystalline phase where silicon is in a five-coordinate site and the alkaline-earth metal atom is in eightfold coordination. At the onset pressure, this transitory phase is itself dynamically unstable to a number of additional vibrational modes, the most relevant being those which result in transformation to a variety of tetrahedral chain silicate motifs. These results support the conjecture that stress-induced amorphization arises from the near simultaneous accessibility of multiple modes of instability in the highly metastable parent crystalline phase.

  • Received 23 September 1994

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.51.14841

©1995 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Mahin Hemmati

  • Department of Chemistry, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287-1604

Andrew Chizmeshya

  • Department of Chemistry, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287-1604
  • Idaho National Engineering Laboratory, EG&G Idaho, P.O. Box 1625, Idaho Falls, Idaho 83415-2208

George H. Wolf, Peter H. Poole, Jun Shao, and C. Austen Angell

  • Department of Chemistry, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287-1604

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Vol. 51, Iss. 21 — 1 June 1995

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