Terapascal static pressure generation with ultrahigh yield strength nanodiamond.
Natalia DubrovinskaiaLeonid DubrovinskyNatalia A SolopovaArtem AbakumovStuart TurnerMichael HanflandElena BykovaMaxim BykovClemens PrescherVitali B PrakapenkaSylvain PetitgirardIrina ChuvashovaBiliana GasharovaYves-Laurent MathisPeter ErshovIrina SnigirevaAnatoly SnigirevPublished in: Science advances (2016)
Studies of materials' properties at high and ultrahigh pressures lead to discoveries of unique physical and chemical phenomena and a deeper understanding of matter. In high-pressure research, an achievable static pressure limit is imposed by the strength of available strong materials and design of high-pressure devices. Using a high-pressure and high-temperature technique, we synthesized optically transparent microballs of bulk nanocrystalline diamond, which were found to have an exceptional yield strength (~460 GPa at a confining pressure of ~70 GPa) due to the unique microstructure of bulk nanocrystalline diamond. We used the nanodiamond balls in a double-stage diamond anvil cell high-pressure device that allowed us to generate static pressures beyond 1 TPa, as demonstrated by synchrotron x-ray diffraction. Outstanding mechanical properties (strain-dependent elasticity, very high hardness, and unprecedented yield strength) make the nanodiamond balls a unique device for ultrahigh static pressure generation. Structurally isotropic, homogeneous, and made of a low-Z material, they are promising in the field of x-ray optical applications.