Nature Communications (Nov 2023)

Melting and defect transitions in FeO up to pressures of Earth’s core-mantle boundary

  • Vasilije V. Dobrosavljevic,
  • Dongzhou Zhang,
  • Wolfgang Sturhahn,
  • Stella Chariton,
  • Vitali B. Prakapenka,
  • Jiyong Zhao,
  • Thomas S. Toellner,
  • Olivia S. Pardo,
  • Jennifer M. Jackson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-43154-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract The high-pressure melting curve of FeO controls key aspects of Earth’s deep interior and the evolution of rocky planets more broadly. However, existing melting studies on wüstite were conducted across a limited pressure range and exhibit substantial disagreement. Here we use an in-situ dual-technique approach that combines a suite of >1000 x-ray diffraction and synchrotron Mössbauer measurements to report the melting curve for Fe1-x O wüstite to pressures of Earth’s lowermost mantle. We further observe features in the data suggesting an order-disorder transition in the iron defect structure several hundred kelvin below melting. This solid-solid transition, suggested by decades of ambient pressure research, is detected across the full pressure range of the study (30 to 140 GPa). At 136 GPa, our results constrain a relatively high melting temperature of 4140 ± 110 K, which falls above recent temperature estimates for Earth’s present-day core-mantle boundary and supports the viability of solid FeO-rich structures at the roots of mantle plumes. The coincidence of the defect order-disorder transition with pressure-temperature conditions of Earth’s mantle base raises broad questions about its possible influence on key physical properties of the region, including rheology and conductivity.