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Cubic calcite and its structural phase transitions

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Abstract

Abstract Calcite, CaCO3, has been reported to exist in as many as seven different structural forms. The structure at room temperature and pressure (space group R

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        c, ‘Phase I’) was established by Bragg many years ago. A phase transition to a higher temperature phase (space group R
        
          
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        m, ‘Phase V’) was noted to occur at around 1240 K—this may proceed via an intermediate phase (space group again R
        
          
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        c, referred to as ‘Phase IV’). These phases differ primarily in the disposition of the CO3 groups. Additional phases are found at higher pressures. We report a para-phase (parent phase, virtual prototype, aristotype) which assists in understanding the different phases, the phase transitions, and especially the domain structures and twin wall boundaries associated with these transitions. Molecular dynamics methods were used to study the temperature evolution of an isothermal-isobaric (NPT) ensemble of some 384,000 atoms. These computations reproduced the features of the known structures in R
        
          
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        c and R
        
          
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        m and then, at higher temperature, revealed a structure of the sodium chloride type (space group Fm
        
          
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        m) in which the entities were the Ca2+ cation and the CO3
        2− anion, this latter with effectively spherical symmetry. On this basis we have upon cooling a necessarily first order ferroelastic transition from cubic Fm
        
          
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        m to rhombohedral R
        
          
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        m, computed to occur at a simulated temperature of 1900 K, and a possibly continuous transition from the R
        
          
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        m to rhombohedral (on a doubled cell) R
        
          
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        c computed to occur at about 1525 K. The computations also allowed us to follow the domain structure and twin walls as a function of temperature, during both heating and cooling. The structure just below the R
        
          
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        m to R
        
          
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        c transition shows strong disorder in the orientation of the CO3 groups, and this may be what is sometimes referred to as Phase IV. The domain structure just below the cubic to rhombohedral transition shows twinning of typical ferroelastic character. The doubling of the cell below the R
        
          
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        m to rhombohedral (on a doubled cell) R
        
          
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        c leads to a more complicated twin pattern. Indeed, the different structures can be identified from patterns of twinning. Differences between domain structures obtained on heating and cooling indicate extensive thermal metastabilities.

Description

Acknowledgements: Y.Y. and X. D. are grateful for the financial support by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (12104355 and 51931004), Sustainable Support Project Funding, the China Postdoctoral Science Foundation (2022M722508), Key Technologies R&D Program (2022YFB3707601), the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (xzy012023168) and the 111 project 2.0 (BP2018008). E.K.H.S. is grateful to EPSRC for support (grant EP/P024904/1) and EU's Horizon 2020 programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie Grant (861153)


Funder: The University of Newcastle (Australia)

Journal Title

Physics and Chemistry of Minerals

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0342-1791
1432-2021

Volume Title

52

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Rights and licensing

Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Sponsorship
National Natural Science Foundation of China (12104355 and 51931004, 12104355 and 51931004, 12104355 and 51931004)
EPSRC (EP/P024904/1)
Marie Sklodowska-Curie Grant (861153)