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Silica-water superstructure and one-dimensional superionic conduit in Earth's mantle.

Junwei LiYanhao LinThomas MeierZhi-Pan LiuWei YangHo-Kwang MaoSheng-Cai ZhuQing-Yang Hu
Published in: Science advances (2023)
Water in Earth's deep interior is predicted to be hydroxyl (OH - ) stored in nominally anhydrous minerals, profoundly modulating both structure and dynamics of Earth's mantle. Here, we use a high-dimensional neuro-network potential and machine learning algorithm to investigate the weight percent water incorporation in stishovite, a main constituent of the subducted oceanic crust. We found that stishovite and water prefer forming medium- to long-range ordered superstructures, featuring one-dimensional (1D) water channels. Synthesizing single crystals of hydrous stishovite, we verified the ordering of OH - groups in the water channels through optical and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and found an average H-H distance of 2.05(3) Å, confirming simulation results. Upon heating, H atoms were predicted to behave fluid-like inside the channels, leading to an exotic 1D superionic state. Water-bearing stishovite could feature high ionic mobility and strong electrical anisotropy, manifesting as electrical heterogeneity in Earth's mantle.
Keyphrases
  • machine learning
  • high resolution
  • artificial intelligence
  • climate change
  • single cell
  • mass spectrometry
  • big data
  • body weight