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In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde ein neuer optischer Aufbau für das Laserlabor der Abteilung Kristallographie im FB 11 an der Goethe-Universität Frankfurt beschrieben. Mit Hilfe dieses Aufbaus konnten verschiedene spektroskopische Methoden genutzt werden, um die - von Druck und Temperatur abhängige - Phasenstabilität von Calcium- und Eisencarbonaten zu untersuchen. Mit Hilfe von Raman-Spektroskopie konnte das Phasendiagramm von Calciumcarbonat (CaCO3) teilweise neu bestimmt werden. Fluoreszenzuntersuchungen an dotierten CaCO3 Proben ergaben, dass sich Europium-dotierter Calcit zunächst in eine amorphe Form umwandelt, bevor er bei ca. 15 GPa in eine amorphe 'aragonitische' Form umgewandelt wird. Die Umwandlung ist nicht reversibel. Laserheizexperimente bei 18.5 GPa an dotiertem Siderit (FeCO3) führten zur Bildung eines neuen Hochdruck-Hochtemperatur FeCO3 -Polymorphs. Die Strukturlösung erfolgte mit Hilfe von Röntgendaten, die am Deutschen Elektronen-Synchrotron (DESY) in Hamburg gewonnen wurden. Schließlich wurde eine neue Methode zur Bestimmung von Temperaturen in Laserheizexperimenten beschrieben. Sie beruht auf der Abschwächung eines Fluoreszenzsignals durch die Temperatur, welche durch die Wechselwirkung eines Heizlasers mit der Probe erzeugt wird.
Diamant hat besondere physikalische und optische Eigenschaften sowie eine starke Resistenz gegenüber Strahlenschädigung. Diese Eigenschaften ermöglichen eine vielfältige Anwendung von Diamant in Wissenschaft und Technik, wie zum Beispiel als Sensormaterial in Strahlungsdetektoren.
Kubisches Zirconiumdioxid (ZrO2) wird aufgrund seiner mechanisch und optisch ähnlichen Eigenschaften unter anderem an Stelle von Diamant eingesetzt. Es ist ebenfalls ein geeignetes Material für viele technische Anwendungen und wird durch seine Strahlenresistenz in Strahlungsumgebungen verwendet. Da beide Materialien in diesem Anwendungsbereich hoher energetischer Strahlung ausgesetzt sind, sind Reaktionen auf die Bestrahlung wie etwa strukturelle Veränderungen oder die Änderungen von Materialeigenschaften von großem Interesse.
In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde die Morphologie, Struktur und physikalischen Eigenschaften von Diamant und Yttriumoxid-stabilisiertem kubischem ZrO2 nach der Bestrahlung mit 14 MeV Au-Ionen und 1.6 GeV Au-Ionen untersucht. Die durch die Bestrahlung verursachten Veränderungen der Oberflächen und der bestrahlten Volumina wurden mit diversen komplementären analytischen Methoden charakterisiert, bewertet und für die verschiedenen Materialien und Ionenenergien verglichen.
Mittels Röntgenfluoreszenzmessungen wurde die Verteilung und Menge an implantiertem Au semi-quantitativ ermittelt. Die Oberflächen der Proben wurden mit optischer Mikroskopie, Rasterkraftmikroskopie, Rasterelektronenmikroskopie, Röntgenreflektometrie und Elektronenrückstreubeugung untersucht. Strukturelle Veränderungen wurden mit Raman-Spektroskopie analysiert. Der elektrische Widerstand, die Dichte, die Härte sowie das Ätzverhalten der bestrahlten Proben wurden ermittelt und geben Auskunft über die Änderung physikalischer Eigenschaften der Materialien.
Diamant und kubisches ZrO2 reagieren sehr unterschiedlich auf die Bestrahlung mit Au-Ionen gleicher Energien und Fluenzen. Die Diamantproben zeigen nach der Bestrahlung mit 14 MeV Au-Ionen deutliche Veränderungen und Schädigungen der Oberfläche sowie des bestrahlten Volumens. Es wird eine Änderung der Struktur, der Dichte, der Härte, des elektrischen Widerstands sowie des Ätzverhaltens der Proben beobachtet, was auf die Amorphisierung von Diamant zurückgeführt wird. Kubisches ZrO2 ist deutlich strahlungsresistenter gegenüber der Bestrahlung mit 14 MeV Au-Ionen. Es werden keine signifikanten strukturellen Änderungen im getesteten Fluenzbereich beobachtet.
Die mit 1.6 GeV Au-Ionen bestrahlten Diamanten zeigen nur geringe Schädigungen und keine deutliche Änderung der Struktur oder der physikalischen Eigenschaften. Die kubischen ZrO2 Proben sind als Folge der Bestrahlung mit 1.6 GeV Au-Ionen zerbrochen, was auf hohe interne Spannung durch Defektbildung zurückgeführt wird.
The formation of terrestrial planets was a complex process which begun in the very early stage of the Solar System in the protoplanetary disk (PPD). Chondrites are fragments of planet precursors, which have never experienced differentiation and can help to reconstruct the first processes leading to planet formation. The main components of chondrites are chondrules, calcium-aluminum-rich inclusions (CAIs), amoeboid olivine aggregates (AOAs), metals and fine-grained material. Each of these components formed by a complex mechanism involving aggregation and/or melting. Previous research has already provided an overall view of the formation of these objects, however, there are still open questions regarding the aggregation behavior of particles, the heating mechanism(s) and the thermal history of CAIs, AOAs and chondrules. For instance, the involvement of flash-heating events and electrostatics in the aggregation and melting of these objects has been a keen topic of discussion.
The aim of this doctoral thesis was to develop and carry out an experiment to study various early Solar System processes under long-term microgravity. In the project with the acronym EXCISS (Experimental Chondrule Formation aboard the ISS), free-floating, 126(23)µm-sized Mg2SiO4 dust particles were exposed to electric fields and electric discharges.
The experimental set-up was installed inside a 10x10x15 cm3-sized container and consisted of an arc generation unit connected to the sample chamber, a camera with an optical system, a power supply unit with lithium-ion batteries and the EXCISS mainboard with a Raspberry Pi Zero and mass storage devices. The sample chamber was manufactured from quartz glass and the experiments were filmed. The complete experiment container was subsequently returned to the Goethe University and the samples were analyzed with scanning electron microscopy, electron backscatter diffraction and synchrotron micro-CT.
Video analysis has shown that particles, which were agitated by electric discharges, align in chains within the electric field with their longest axis parallel to the electric field lines. Consequently, electric fields could have influenced the inner structure and porosity of particle aggregates in the PPD.
The discharge experiments produced fused aggregates and individual melt spherules.
The fused aggregates share many morphological characteristics with natural fluffy-type CAIs and some igneous CAIs found in chondrites. Consequently, CAIs could have formed by the aggregation of particles with various degrees of melting. Further, a small amount of melting could have supplied the required stability for such fractal structures to have survived transportation and aggregation to, and subsequent compaction within, developing planetesimals.
Some initial particles were completely melted by the arc discharges and formed melt spherules. The newly formed olivines crystallized with a preferred orientation of the [010] axis perpendicular to the surface of the spherule. Similar preferred orientations have been found in natural chondrules. However, the microstructure differs from the results of previous experiments on Earth, which show, for example, crystal settling on one side of the sample because of the influence of gravity. Furthermore, the melt spherules show evidence for an interaction of the melt with the surrounding hot gas. Therefore, microgravity experiments with more advanced experimental parameters bear great potential for future chondrule formation experiments.
First-principles modeling techniques offer the ability to simulate a wide range of systems under different physical conditions, such as temperature, pressure, and composition, without relying on empirical knowledge. Density functional theory (DFT), a quantum mechanical method, has become an exceptionally successful framework for materials science modeling. Employing DFT makes it possible to gain valuable insights into the fundamental state of a system, enabling the reliable determination of equilibrium crystal structures. Over time, DFT has become an essential tool that can be incorporated into various schemes for predicting the properties of a material related to its structure, insulating/metallic behavior, magnetism, and optics. DFT is regularly applied in numerous fields, spanning from fundamental subjects in condensed matter physics to the study of large-scale phenomena in geosciences. In the latter, the effectiveness of DFT stems from its ability to simulate the properties found on the Earth, other planets, and meteorites, which may pose challenges for their direct study or laboratory investigation.
In this thesis, a comprehensive examination of a family of monosulfides and a perovskite heterostructure was conducted. These materials are relevant for their potential applications in technology, energy harvesting, and in the case of monosulfides, their speculated abundance on the planet Mercury.
Firstly, a DFT approach was used to analyze two non-magnetic monosulfides, CaS and MgS. We determined their structural properties and then focused on the modeling of their reflectivity in the infrared region. The calculation of the reflectivity considered both harmonic and anharmonic contributions. In the harmonic limit, the non-analytic correction was employed to accurately determine the LO/TO splitting, which is necessary to delimit the retstrahlend band, that is, the maximum of the reflectivity. The anharmonic effects given by up to three-phonon and isotopic scatterings, which were included using perturbation theory, primarily smeared the reflectivity spectra edges in the high-wave region.
Secondly, four polymorphs of MnS were studied using a combination of first-principles methods to simulate their antiferromagnetic (AFM) and paramagnetic (PM) states. The integration of DFT+$U$ with special quasirandom structures (SQS) supercells, and occupation matrix control techniques was crucial for achieving convergence, structural optimization accuracy, and obtaining finite energy band gaps and local magnetic moments in the PM phases. The addition of the Hubbard $U$ correction was necessary to treat the highly-correlated Mn $d$-electrons. The success of our approach was clear based on our electronic structure predictions for the PM rock-salt B1-MnS polymorph. Experimentally this phase has been observed to be an insulator, but multiple \emph{ab initio} works resulted previously in metallic behavior. Our computations, on the other hand, predicted insulating and magnetic properties that compare well with available measurements. Additionally, the pressure-field stability of the four MnS polymorphs was studied. In the case of the PM phases, B1-MnS was identified to be the most stable up to about 21 GPa, then transforming into the B31-MnS polymorph. This finding was in close agreement with high-pressure experiments reporting a similar phase transformation. The optical properties of B1-, B4-, and B31-MnS were also simulated. The SQS technique was used to obtain soft-mode-free phonon band structures within the harmonic approximation. Then, the anharmonic effects were included, and the reflectivity was calculated for B1-MnS and B4-MnS. In both cases, a good agreement for the LO/TO splitting was achieved in comparison to experimental results.
Lastly, the oxygen-deficient heterostructure of LaAlO$_{3-\delta}$ /SrTiO$_{3-\delta}$ was investigated also employing DFT+$U$, with a particular emphasis on the potential impact of vacancy clustering at the interface. Six distinct configurations of pairs of vacancies were studied and their energies were compared to find the most stable one. The orbital reconstruction of Ti orbitals was also examined based on their location with respect to the vacancies and the local magnetic moments were calculated. The final results showed that linearly arranged vacancies located opposite to Ti ions give the most energetically stable configuration.
Carbon is an element that controls planetary habitability, and is fundamental for life on Earth. Its behaviour has important consequences for the global climate system, the origin and evolution of life on Earth. While the biosphere and atmosphere’s carbon cycle only accounts for less than 1% of the global carbon budget, hidden reservoirs of deep carbon in the Earth’s interior comprise the predominant storage of carbon on the planet. At the Earth’s surface, 60-70 % of carbon is hosted by carbonate minerals, which are then transported to the Earth’s interior, mainly in the form of sediments, by subduction of the oceanic lithosphere. Subducting plates are subjected to decarbonation, dehydration, and melting with CO2 release via supra-subduction volcanism. Nevertheless, part of the subducted carbonates’ may survive and be further transported to the deep mantle. Direct evidence of the existence of carbonates in the Earth’s interior, possibly reaching down to the lower mantle, comes from the finding of syngenetic inclusions of carbonates in diamonds and mantle xenoliths. The presence of carbonates in the deep Earth has a critical effect on the physical properties of the mantle. Melting and chemical speciation of the mantle are strongly affected by the form of C and carbonate stability. Therefore, the study of the stability and physical properties of carbonates at high pressures and temperatures is fundamental, because understanding the processes involved in the deep carbon cycle helps to improve our picture of the whole mantle.
The systematic characterization of the elastic properties of carbonates as a function of their structure and chemical composition is of great importance because it may allow to identify their presence and distribution by seismology. Inverting seismic observations to successfully constrain the chemical composition and mineralogy of the Earth’s interior requires knowledge of the physical properties of all possible Earth’s materials at pressures and temperatures applicable to the Earth’s interior. Up to now, a multitude of studies has focused on the construction of phase diagrams and structural transitions by means of X-ray diffraction and vibrational spectroscopy experiments.
Few studies are available on the complete elastic tensor of carbonates, however most of the datasets are not accompanied by an accurate characterization of the samples, which are often solid solutions and the exact chemical composition, density or the details about the experimental methods used are not presented. The aim of this thesis is to study the effect of chemical composition on the elastic properties of carbonates, providing a reliable dataset on the elasticity of the main carbonates. In particular, the elastic properties of crystalline aragonite, CaCO3, and Fe-dolomite, (Ca, Mg, Fe)(CO3)2, with different compositions were studied by Brillouin spectroscopy at ambient conditions. Brillouin spectroscopy was also used to investigate the elastic behaviour of amorphous calcium carbonate samples with different water contents (up to 18 wt%) at high pressures, up to 20 GPa.
Furthermore, the importance of cationic substitution on the structure and high pressure behaviour of carbonates was investigated by studying a synthetic CaCO3-SrCO3 solid solution at ambient conditions and at high pressures, up to 10 GPa, by single crystal X-ray diffraction. Finally, the study of the effect of composition on the elastic properties of families of isostructural solids was also extended to a different class of materials, the metal guanidinium formates. The elasticity of a family of perovskite metal organic frameworks, metal guanidinium formates C(NH2)3MII(HCOO)3, with MII =Mn, Zn, Cu, Co, Cd and Ca was investigated by combining Brillouin spectroscopy, resonant ultrasound spectroscopy, density functional theory and thermal diffuse scattering analysis.