Research Data: TEM data for the first observation of quenched Davemaoite to Ambient Conditions: its Electron Diffraction Pattern
Files
Resource Type
License
Contributors
Creators / Authors
Contact Persons
Supervisors
Researchers
Data Collectors
Data Curators
Contributing Professorships
Contributing Chairs
Contributing Junior Professorships
Contributing Chairs
Contributing Central Facilities
Contributing Research Units
Contributing Related Organisations
Contributing Further Organisations
Collections
Abstract & Descriptions
Abstract
Calcium-rich silicate perovskite, davemaoite is often completely amorphized at ambient pressure, because the perovskite structure containing large element is unstable at 1 bar. However, we obtained for the first time an electron diffraction pattern of davemaoite in a transmission electron microscope. To understand why the unstable crystalline davemaoite lasted so long in the microscope, we investigate the textures with surrounding minerals using the electron-beam imaging and analyze the ambient volume from the diffraction patterns to understand the survival mechanisms. We find that the preservation of the crystalline state is most likely due to a static pressure generated by volume expansion of the surrounding amorphous glass transformed from the precursor denser crystalline state. The mechanism had not been demonstrated experimentally in a sub-micrometer microscopy before, even in the recovery of high-pressure minerals in shocked meteorites. Understanding this mechanism is important because the other high-pressure minerals at a small domain might survive at much lower pressure than the stability field at high pressure even though they are usually unquenchable. Further high-pressure minerals under a static stress can be discovered at ambient conditions by fine electron microscopy.