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Icosahedral quasicrystals (i-phases) in the Al-Cu-Fe system are of great interest because of their perfect quasicrystalline structure and natural occurrences in the Khatyrka meteorite. The natural quasicrystal of composition AlCuFe, referred to as i-phase II, is unique because it deviates significantly from the stability field of i-phase and has not been synthesized in a laboratory setting to date. Synthetic i-phases formed in shock-recovery experiments present a novel strategy for exploring the stability of new quasicrystal compositions and prove the impact origin of natural quasicrystals. In this study, an Al-Cu-W graded density impactor (GDI, originally manufactured as a ramp-generating impactor but here used as a target) disk was shocked to sample a full range of Al/Cu starting ratios in an Fe-bearing 304 stainless-steel target chamber. In a strongly deformed region of the recovered sample, reactions between the GDI and the steel produced an assemblage of co-existing AlCuFeCr i-phase II + stolperite (β, AlCu) + khatyrkite (θ, AlCu), an exact match to the natural i-phase II assemblage in the meteorite. In a second experiment, the continuous interface between the GDI and steel formed another more Fe-rich quinary i-phase (AlFeCuCrNi), together with stolperite and hollisterite (λ, AlFe), which is the expected assemblage at phase equilibrium. This study is the first laboratory reproduction of i-phase II with its natural assemblage. It suggests that the field of thermodynamically stable icosahedrite (AlCuFe) could separate into two disconnected fields under shock pressure above 20 GPa, leading to the co-existence of Fe-rich and Fe-poor i-phases like the case in Khatyrka. In light of this, shock-recovery experiments do indeed offer an efficient method of constraining the impact conditions recorded by quasicrystal-bearing meteorite, and exploring formation conditions and mechanisms leading to quasicrystals.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S2052252520002729 | DOI Listing |
IUCrJ
September 2025
Department of Physics, Chuo University, Kasuga, Tokyo 112-8551, Japan.
Quasicrystals are long-range-ordered materials with rotational symmetry incompatible with periodicity. Takakura et al. [(2025).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIUCrJ
July 2025
Department of Earth Sciences, University of Florence, Florence I-50121, Italy.
Icosahedrite, natural icosahedral AlCuFe, was discovered in a meteorite about 15 years ago. We have carried out a high-resolution X-ray diffraction study on a sample of this meteoritic mineral at the ESRF. The diffraction pattern turned out to be identical to an intermediate phase observed in synthetic i-AlCuFe during the transformation from the quasicrystalline state to a periodic rhombohedral phase.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
June 2021
Department of Physics, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544
The first test explosion of a nuclear bomb, the Trinity test of 16 July 1945, resulted in the fusion of surrounding sand, the test tower, and copper transmission lines into a glassy material known as "trinitite." Here, we report the discovery, in a sample of red trinitite, of a hitherto unknown composition of icosahedral quasicrystal, SiCuCaFe It represents the oldest extant anthropogenic quasicrystal currently known, with the distinctive property that its precise time of creation is indelibly etched in history. Like the naturally formed quasicrystals found in the Khatyrka meteorite and experimental shock syntheses of quasicrystals, the anthropogenic quasicrystals in red trinitite demonstrate that transient extreme pressure-temperature conditions are suitable for the synthesis of quasicrystals and for the discovery of new quasicrystal-forming systems.
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March 2021
Institute of Materials and Environmental Chemistry, Research Centre for Natural Sciences, Magyar tudósok körútja 2, Budapest, 1117, Hungary.
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1107/S2052252520005254.].
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIUCrJ
May 2020
Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Università degli Studi di Firenze, Firenze I-50121, Italy.
Icosahedral quasicrystals (i-phases) in the Al-Cu-Fe system are of great interest because of their perfect quasicrystalline structure and natural occurrences in the Khatyrka meteorite. The natural quasicrystal of composition AlCuFe, referred to as i-phase II, is unique because it deviates significantly from the stability field of i-phase and has not been synthesized in a laboratory setting to date. Synthetic i-phases formed in shock-recovery experiments present a novel strategy for exploring the stability of new quasicrystal compositions and prove the impact origin of natural quasicrystals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF