Developments in pulsed laser heating applied to nuclear resonance techniques are presented together with their applications to studies of geophysically relevant materials. Continuous laser heating in diamond anvil cells is a widely used method to generate extreme temperatures at static high pressure conditions in order to study the structure and properties of materials found in deep planetary interiors. The pulsed laser heating technique has advantages over continuous heating, including prevention of the spreading of heated sample and/or the pressure medium and, thus, a better stability of the heating process. Time differentiated data acquisition coupled with pulsed laser heating in diamond anvil cells was successfully tested at the Nuclear Resonance beamline (ID18) of the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility. We show examples applying the method to investigation of an assemblage containing ε-Fe, FeO, and Fe3C using synchrotron Mössbauer source spectroscopy, FeCO3 using nuclear inelastic scattering, and Fe2O3 using nuclear forward scattering. These examples demonstrate the applicability of pulsed laser heating in diamond anvil cells to spectroscopic techniques with long data acquisition times, because it enables stable pulsed heating with data collection at specific time intervals that are synchronized with laser pulses.

Kupenko, I., Strohm, C., Mccammon, C., Cerantola, V., Glazyrin, K., Petitgirard, S., et al. (2015). Time differentiated nuclear resonance spectroscopy coupled with pulsed laser heating in diamond anvil cells. REVIEW OF SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENTS, 86(11) [10.1063/1.4935304].

Time differentiated nuclear resonance spectroscopy coupled with pulsed laser heating in diamond anvil cells

Cerantola V;
2015

Abstract

Developments in pulsed laser heating applied to nuclear resonance techniques are presented together with their applications to studies of geophysically relevant materials. Continuous laser heating in diamond anvil cells is a widely used method to generate extreme temperatures at static high pressure conditions in order to study the structure and properties of materials found in deep planetary interiors. The pulsed laser heating technique has advantages over continuous heating, including prevention of the spreading of heated sample and/or the pressure medium and, thus, a better stability of the heating process. Time differentiated data acquisition coupled with pulsed laser heating in diamond anvil cells was successfully tested at the Nuclear Resonance beamline (ID18) of the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility. We show examples applying the method to investigation of an assemblage containing ε-Fe, FeO, and Fe3C using synchrotron Mössbauer source spectroscopy, FeCO3 using nuclear inelastic scattering, and Fe2O3 using nuclear forward scattering. These examples demonstrate the applicability of pulsed laser heating in diamond anvil cells to spectroscopic techniques with long data acquisition times, because it enables stable pulsed heating with data collection at specific time intervals that are synchronized with laser pulses.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
synchrotron; nuclear resonance spectroscopy; synchrotron; pulsed laser heating; high pressure; diamond anvil cell
English
2015
86
11
114501
none
Kupenko, I., Strohm, C., Mccammon, C., Cerantola, V., Glazyrin, K., Petitgirard, S., et al. (2015). Time differentiated nuclear resonance spectroscopy coupled with pulsed laser heating in diamond anvil cells. REVIEW OF SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENTS, 86(11) [10.1063/1.4935304].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/397795
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