Ronald E. Cohen,* I. I. Mazin, Donald G. Isaak
R. E. Cohen and I. I. Mazin, Geophysical Laboratory and
Center for High-Pressure Research, Carnegie Institution
of Washington, 5251 Broad Branch Road, NW, Washington, DC 20015, USA.
D. G. Isaak, Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics, University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles,
CA 90095 –1567, and Department of Mathematics and
Physics, Azusa Pacific University, Azusa, CA 91702,
USA.
* To wh
Abstract
Magnetic collapse in transition metal ions is predicted from first-principles computations
at pressures reached in the Earth’s lower mantle and core. Magnetic collapse would lead
to marked changes in geophysically important properties, such as elasticity and conductivity, and also to different geochemical behavior, such as element partitioning, than
estimated by extrapolating low-pressure data, and thus change the understanding of
Earth’s structure and evolution. Magnetic collapse results from band widening rather
than from changes in crystal field splitting under pressure. Seismic anomalies in the outer
core and the lowermost mantle may be due to magnetic collapse of ferrous iron, dissolved in iron liquid in the outer core, and in solution in magnesiowu¨ stite in the lowermost
mantle.
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/I_Mazin/publication/14202396_Magnetic_Collapse_in_Transition_Metal_Oxides_at_High_Pressure_Implications_for_the_Earth/links/00463523ae991492ed000000/Magnetic-Collapse-in-Transition-Metal-Oxides-at-High-Pressure-Implications-for-the-Earth.pdf
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