4.5 Article

Boron-doped diamond heater and its application to large-volume, high-pressure, and high-temperature experiments

Journal

REVIEW OF SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENTS
Volume 80, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/1.3084209

Keywords

boron; diamond; graphite; high-pressure techniques; high-temperature techniques; melting point; mixtures

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
  2. COE-21 Program of the Institute for Study of the Earth's Interior, Okayama University

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A temperature of 3500 degrees C was generated using a diamond resistance heater in a large-volume Kawai-type high-pressure apparatus. Re and LaCrO(3) have conventionally been used for heaters in high-pressure studies but they cannot generate temperatures higher than 2900 degrees C and make in situ x-ray observations difficult due to their high x-ray absorption. Using a boron-doped diamond heater overcomes these problems and achieves stable temperature generation for pressure over 10 GPa. The heater starting material is a cold-compressed mixture of graphite with boron used to avoid the manufacturing difficulties due to the extreme hardness of diamond. The diamond heater was synthesized in situ from the boron-graphite mixture at temperature of 1600 +/- 100 degrees C and pressure of 20 GPa. By using the proposed technique, we have employed the diamond heater for high-temperature generation in a large-volume high-pressure apparatus. Achievement of temperatures above 3000 degrees C allows us to measure the melting points of the important constituents in earth's mantle (MgSiO(3), SiO(2), and Al(2)O(3)) and core (Fe and Ni) at extremely high pressures.

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