4.2 Article

Fe0.79Si0.07B0.14 metallic glass gaskets for high-pressure research beyond 1 Mbar

Journal

JOURNAL OF SYNCHROTRON RADIATION
Volume 29, Issue -, Pages 1167-1179

Publisher

INT UNION CRYSTALLOGRAPHY
DOI: 10.1107/S1600577522007573

Keywords

diamond anvil cell (DAC); amorphous metal gasket; metallic glass; axial and radial high-pressure X-ray diffraction; signal-to-noise ratio

Funding

  1. 2019 Helmoltz-OCPC-Program [20191006]
  2. Federal Ministry of Education and Research, Germany (BMBF) [05K13WC3, 05K19WC1]
  3. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG projects) [DU 954-11/1, DU 393-9/2, DU 393-13/1]
  4. Swedish Government Strategic Research Area in Materials Science on Functional Materials at Linkoping University (Faculty Grant SFO-Mat-LiU) [2009-00971]
  5. Slovak Science Grant Agency [VEGA 1/0406/20]

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The metallic glass Fe0.79Si0.07B0.14 gaskets have been found to offer a stable sample environment in high-pressure X-ray diffraction experiments, even under compression exceeding 1 Mbar. These gaskets improve various aspects of megabar experiments and have a higher signal-to-noise ratio compared to conventional gaskets made of other materials.
A gasket is an important constituent of a diamond anvil cell (DAC) assembly, responsible for the sample chamber stability at extreme conditions for X-ray diffraction studies. In this work, we studied the performance of gaskets made of metallic glass Fe0.79Si0.07B0.14 in a number of high-pressure X-ray diffraction (XRD) experiments in DACs equipped with conventional and toroidal-shape diamond anvils. The experiments were conducted in either axial or radial geometry with X-ray beams of micrometre to sub-micrometre size. We report that Fe0.79Si0.07B0.14 metallic glass gaskets offer a stable sample environment under compression exceeding 1 Mbar in all XRD experiments described here, even in those involving small-molecule gases (e.g. Ne, H-2) used as pressure-transmitting media or in those with laser heating in a DAC. Our results emphasize the material's importance for a great number of delicate experiments conducted under extreme conditions. They indicate that the application of Fe0.79Si0.07B0.14 metallic glass gaskets in XRD experiments for both axial and radial geometries substantially improves various aspects of megabar experiments and, in particular, the signal-to-noise ratio in comparison to that with conventional gaskets made of Re, W, steel or other crystalline metals.

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