Extreme Metastability of Diamond and its Transformation to the BC8 Post-Diamond Phase of Carbon.
Kien Nguyen-CongJonathan T WillmanJoseph M GonzalezAshley S WilliamsAnatoly B BelonoshkoStan G MooreAidan P ThompsonMitchell A WoodJon H EggertMarius MillotLuis A Zepeda-RuizIvan I OleynikPublished in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2024)
Diamond possesses exceptional physical properties due to its remarkably strong carbon-carbon bonding, leading to significant resilience to structural transformations at very high pressures and temperatures. Despite several experimental attempts, synthesis and recovery of the theoretically predicted post-diamond BC8 phase remains elusive. Through quantum-accurate multimillion atom molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, we have uncovered the extreme metastability of diamond at very high pressures, significantly exceeding its range of thermodynamic stability. We predict the post-diamond BC8 phase to be experimentally accessible only within a narrow high pressure-temperature region of the carbon phase diagram. The diamond to BC8 transformation proceeds through premelting followed by BC8 nucleation and growth in the metastable carbon liquid. We propose a double-shock compression pathway for BC8 synthesis, which is currently being explored in experiments at the National Ignition Facility.