4.2 Article

The pressure-induced phase transition(s) of ZrSiO4 : revised

Journal

PHYSICS AND CHEMISTRY OF MINERALS
Volume 46, Issue 8, Pages 807-814

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00269-019-01041-1

Keywords

Zircon; High pressure; Phase transition; Raman spectroscopy; Soft mode

Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC) [714936]
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgesellschaft [MI 1127/7-2]

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The existence of a new high-pressure low-symmetry (HPLS) ZrSiO4 phase (space group I (4) over bar 2d), which has been predicted by density-functional-theory (DFT) calculations (Stangarone et al. in Am Mineral, 2019b), is experimentally confirmed by in situ high-pressure Raman spectroscopic analysis up to 25.3 GPa. The new ZrSiO4 polymorph is developed from zircon via a soft-mode-driven displacive phase transition. The Cochran-law-type pressure dependency of the soft-mode wavenumber reveals a zircon-to-HPLS critical pressure p(c) = 20.98 +/- 0.02 GPa. The increase in the phonon compressibilities of the zircon hard mode near 202 cm(-1) at p > p(r) = 10.0 GPa as well as of the reidite hard mode near 349 cm(-1) at p < p(r) marks the pressure above which zircon becomes thermodynamically metastable with respect to reidite; the experimentally determined value of p(r) is in good accordance with the equilibrium zircon-reidite transition pressure derived from DFT simulations. However, at room temperature, there is not enough driving force to rebuild the atomic linkages and the reconstructive transition to reidite happens similar to 1.4 GPa above p(c), indicating that at room temperature, the HPLS phase is a structural bridge between zircon and reidite. The pressure dependencies of the phonon modes in the range 350-460 cm(-1) reveal that the reconstructive phase transition in the ZrSiO4 system is triggered by energy resonance and admixture of hard modes from the parent and resultant phase.

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