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Multifaceted mineral: intense heat, pressure bear new form of silica.


By squeezing a sample of quartz to pressures higher than those deep within Earth while zapping the material with a laser, scientists have created an exotic mineral previously unknown on Earth. They speculate that it may occur naturally on some large planets.

Silicon dioxide silicon dioxide: see silica.


(SiO2) A hard, glassy mineral found in such materials as rock, quartz, sand and opal. In MOS chip fabrication, it is used to create the insulation layer between the metal gates of the top layer and the silicon elements below.
, or silica, is one of Earth's most common chemical compounds. It makes up more than 60 percent of the planet's crust. The substance is also one of nature's most diverse. Its atoms aggregate in forms as common as quartz crystals and as exotic as coesite and stishovite stish·ov·ite  
n.
A dense tetragonal polymorph of quartz that is formed under great pressure and is often associated with meteoroid impact.



[After Sergei Mikhailovich Stishov
, minerals formed by the intense pressures generated when extraterrestrial objects such as comets and asteroids This is a list of numbered minor planets, nearly all of them asteroids, in sequential order.

As of late September 2007 there are 164,612 numbered minor planets, and many more not yet numbered. Most asteroids are ordinary and not particularly noteworthy.
 strike Earth's surface Noun 1. Earth's surface - the outermost level of the land or sea; "earthquakes originate far below the surface"; "three quarters of the Earth's surface is covered by water"
surface
 (SN: 6/15/02, p. 378). In all, there are at least seven naturally occurring crystalline forms of silica on Earth, says Kei Hirose of the Tokyo Institute of Technology Tokyo Institute of Technology (東京工業大学  .

Now, scientists report yet another form. Hirose and his colleagues took a mixture of quartz crystals and silica glass and compressed it between two small diamonds to pressures approaching 3 million times the pressure exerted by the atmosphere at sea level. They also heated the sample with a laser to temperatures of up to 1,700[degrees]C. The diffraction pattern diffraction pattern

The interference pattern that results when a wave or a series of waves undergoes diffraction, as when passed through a diffraction grating or the lattices of a crystal.
 of X rays fired through the material provided information about the arrangements of atoms in the silica.

At low pressures, six oxygen atoms surround each silicon atom in a silica crystal. In their experiments, Hirose and his team noted that silica's atomic arrangement became more compact at temperatures above 1,525[degrees]C and pressures above 2.6 million atmospheres. This version of silica is at least 5 percent denser than any known low-pressure form. In the dense configuration--predicted years ago but never before synthesized--each silicon atom has eight neighboring oxygen atoms. The researchers w describe their feat in the Aug. 5 Science.

The new research is "impressive," says Ho-kwang Mao of the Carnegie Institution of Washington The introduction to this article may be too long. Please help improve the introduction by moving some material from it into the body of the article according to the suggestions at  (D.C.). Although many scientists have conducted tests at high pressures or high temperatures, "this could very well be the highest combination of pressure and temperature" ever reached in experiments on any mineral, he notes.

The newly produced type of silica probably doesn't exist on Earth. About 2,900 kilometers below Earth's surface, at the boundary between the outer core of molten iron and the mantle of overlying overlying

suffocation of piglets by the sow. The piglets may be weak from illness or malnutrition, the sow may be clumsy or ill, the pen may be inadequate in size or poorly designed so that piglets cannot escape.
 minerals, pressures measure only 1.3 million atmospheres. Most scientists speculate that below that core-mantle boundary, where pressures are even higher, there's no silica.

Hirose's group notes that its new form of silica might exist on large planets, such as Uranus, Neptune, or some of those discovered around distant suns. There, thick atmospheres and massive, rocky cores that likely include silica may exert the immense pressures that could make up the new mineral.
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Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Perkins, S.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1U5DC
Date:Aug 6, 2005
Words:458
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