research papers
The temperature-dependent post-perovskite structure model of MgSiO3 is reinvestigated through analysis of the atom-pair distances observed experimentally via Fourier transformation of X-ray diffraction and diffuse scattering, the total X-ray scattering, from CaIrO3. In contrast to the results of a previous Rietveld structure refinement, which shows a negative or null thermal expansion of Ir—O and Ca—O bond lengths within the average long-range structure, visual inspection of these atom-pair distances in the pair-distribution function, in addition to structure models fitted through least-squares refinement to this local-structure data, strongly suggests that these distances between atom pairs increase with temperature. The average long-range structure of CaIrO3, visible from Rietveld structure refinement, is distinct from the short-range structure (≤ 18 Å) at all of the temperatures examined in this study (325–1114 K) and is reproduced in structure models fitted to the pair-distribution function extending to sufficiently long atom-pair distances (≥ 50 Å). While previous data obtained with Rietveld structure refinement show the iridium coordination octahedra to distort with increasing temperature, models of the short-range structure demonstrate that these polyhedra instead reduce distortion and rotate in a manner similar to that occurring in the perovskite structure.
Keywords: pair-distribution function; temperature dependence; modeling; post-perovskites; MgSiO3; CaIrO3; lower mantle.
Supporting information
Portable Document Format (PDF) file https://doi.org/10.1107/S0021889808019365/ko5064sup1.pdf | |
Portable Document Format (PDF) file https://doi.org/10.1107/S0021889808019365/ko5064sup2.pdf |