High-pressure phase transformations in a natural crystalline diopside and a synthetic CaMgSi2O6 glass

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Scientific paper

A phase transformation study has been carried out on a natural crystalline diopside and a synthetic CaMgSi2O6 glass at pressures of up to 34.5 GPa and 30 GPa, respectively, at ~1000°C in a diamond-anvil cell in conjunction with a YAG laser-heating system. On the basis of X-ray diffraction data obtained from samples under in situ pressure conditions and those quenched and unloaded to the ambient conditions, we found that the crystalline diopside breaks down into Mg2SiO4 (spinel) + SiO2 (stishovite) + CaSiO3 (perovskite) at ~17 GPa; at higher pressures, while the CaSiO3 (perovskite) remains stable, the Mg2SiO4 (spinel) and SiO2 (stishovite) recombine to form MgSiO3 (ilmenite) at ~22 GPa which, in turn, transforms into an orthorhombic MgSiO3 (perovskite) at pressures above 24 GPa. We have also found that the CaMgSi2O6 glass is transformed directly into cubic (Ca,Mg)SiO3-perovskite at pressures higher than 13 GPa. These experimental results demonstrate that a different starting material (crystalline or glassy) used in a high pressure and temperature study indeed leads to different high pressure phase(s), thus reconciling the existing controversy on the phase transformation in diopside. On the basis of the pressure-volume data obtained for the cubic (Ca,Mg)SiO3 perovskite, it is also suggested that the cubic (Ca,Mg)SiO3 perovskite, although kinetically favorable to form from the CaMgSi2O6 glass, is not a thermodynamically stable phase with respect to the assemblage of the orthorhombic MgSiO3 and the cubic CaSiO3 perovskites at pressures between 10 and 30 GPa.
Another interesting finding in this study is that in the case of the natural diopside, stishovite is present with mMgSiO3 (ilmenite) + CaSiO3 (perovskite) at 22-24 GPa, and with MgSiO3 (perovskite) + CaSiO3 (perovskite) at pressures above 24 GPa. In view of the previous results on pure synthetic diopside in which no stishovite was observed at pressures above 22 GPa, this intriguing result is most likely due to the trace amount of other cations (i.e. Fe, Mn, Na, Al, and Ti) present in the sample. The mechanism of precipitating the stishovite phase from ilmenite or perovskite(s), or both, is yet unknown, but the results suggest positively that MgSiO3 (ilmenite or perovskite) or CaSiO3 perovskite, or both, are non-stoichiometric and deficient in silica.

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