Evolution of electrical conductivity and semiconductor to metal transition of iron oxides at extreme conditions

2022-08-31 09:55YukaiZhuang庄毓凯andQingyangHu胡清扬
Chinese Physics B 2022年8期

Yukai Zhuang(庄毓凯) and Qingyang Hu(胡清扬)

1Institute of Atomic and Molecular Physics,Sichuan University,Chengdu 610065,China

2Center for High Pressure Science and Technology Advanced Research(HPSTAR),Beijing 100094,China

Keywords: high pressure,metallization,iron oxides,electrical conductivity

1. Introduction

The chondritic planetary model calculates that the solid Earth consists of four major elements, which are 32.1 wt.%iron (Fe), 30.1 wt.% oxygen (O), 15.1 wt.% silicon (Si), and 13.9 wt.% magnesium (Mg).[1]The binary system of Fe–O covers more than half of Earth’s weight. Thus, their highpressure–temperature(P–T)properties play a vital role in understanding the dynamics and evolution of this planet. On Earth’s surface,three natural occurring iron oxides are known since the Iron Age,[2]namely, FeO(w¨ustite, the ferrous state of iron),Fe2O3(hematite,the ferric state of iron),and Fe3O4(magnetite, mixed ferrous and ferric iron) which are used as ores for making iron. Tools obtained from iron smelting, a process that involves heating and chemical treatment to extract iron,have incubated symbolic civilizations in humans.[3]

While iron oxides at atmospheric pressure have been studied since more than 2600 years ago,the thermodynamical variable pressure brings forth even more intriguing physical and chemical phenomena. Under high pressure–temperature(P–T)conditions,several iron oxides with unconventional stoichiometries can exist through the chemistry of iron and naturally occurring iron oxides. For example, Fe4O5is identified through x-ray diffraction at about 10 GPa and 1800 K,[4]and it possibly coexists with Fe5O6at slightly higher temperatures(e.g.,∼2000 K).[5]Later on,complex iron-oxides with similar structural motifs like Fe6.32O9, Fe7O9, Fe7O10, and Fe25O32are discovered at pressures throughout the lower mantle and they can also form solid solutions with Mg.[6–8]It is also worth noting that oxygen with a valence state greater than−2 can be stabilized under high pressure, as FeO2and (Mg,Fe)O2are identified at above 80 GPa.[9,10]Such wide chemistry flexibility makes iron-oxide one of the research frontiers in materials and Earth sciences.[11,12]

Our previous work has discussed the medium-range structural properties of the Fe–O system under high pressure.[13]Here in this work, we narrow down the scope to the electrical property of iron oxides,with a focus on its bandgap width under the influence of extreme conditions. While iron is a conventional metal, the other end-member of the Fe–O binary,oxygen also closes its bandgap at 96 GPa[14,15]and even becomes a superconductor at above megabar pressures.[16]For other members of iron oxides, previous laboratory electrical conductivity measurements show that they appear as semiconductors or insulators under ambient conditions. As the chemical bonding becomes stiffened under pressurization,their bandgap width generally becomes narrower in a response to electron hybridization and electrostatic interaction.[17]The critical metallization point is then constrained by the combination of thermodynamic parameters. During this process,the controlling conduction mechanism switches from small polaron (e.g., electron–hole hopping between Fe2+and Fe3+)to electron and ionic conduction.[18]It is also reported that the high-pressure polymorph of FeOOH enters the superionic state at above 80 GPa using the laser heating technique,[19]equivalent to the depth below∼1800 km.[20–22]On account of the complex behavior of iron oxides,it is necessary to tease out the current research frontier of their evolution of electrical conductivity and semiconductor to metal transitions.

In this review,we first demonstrate the experimental and theoretical works in measuring the electrical conductivity of three natural-occurring iron oxides and their metallization conditions. We then summarize the latest progress in studying mix-valencemFeO·nFe2O3. We will also discuss the complex chemical and electronic properties of FeO2. The last session discusses opportunities and challenges in this field of research.Each session will start with a simple introduction to the polymorphic transitions under highP–Tconditions and followed by examples of electrical conductivity measurements. The evolution of highP–Telectrical resistivity and the deep mantle metalized zones will be shown at the end of each session.

2. The archetypal wu¨stite FeO and challenges in describing strongly correlated iron oxides

Among the aforementioned iron oxides,w¨ustite(FeO)is an archetypal mineral to study strong correlation interaction and also a fundamental component in deep Earth. Under ambient conditions,FeO crystallizes in the NaCl-type(B1)structure. At pressure up to∼16 GPa, B1 FeO exhibits lattice distortion along the[111]axis to the rhombohedralRstructure(rB1).[23,24]In the deep lower mantle, the rB1 phase transforms to the NiAs-type (B8) phase at about 70 GPa after annealing at 1000 K.[25]Knittleet al.(1986) measured the resistance of B1 w¨ustite using the shock wave method. The resistivity has a negative correlation with pressure and reaches approximately the level of 10−6Ω·m at 72 GPa and 1200 K,which may suggest the onset of metallization.[26]The metallic phase of FeO was then proved by x-ray diffraction and radiometric measurements.[27]Ohtaet al.measured the electrical conductivity of both B1 and B8 FeO up to 169 GPa and 2050 K using a laser-heated diamond anvil cell. The temperature-dependent resistance measurements at 140 GPa and 150 GPa further demonstrate that B8 FeO is a metallic phase (Fig. 1).[28]The high-pressure M¨ossbauer studies on FeO(Fig.2)show that the IS values of the nonmagnetic component decrease discontinuously in 114.5–131.1 GPa and the QS values also display a discontinuity in 109–131.1 GPa,[29]which is close to the metallization pressure range.

Other than experiments,theoretical studies have met major challenges in describing the electronic structure of FeO.Density functional theory (DFT) alone falsely predicts that FeO is metal under ambient conditions, and the problem is aided by correcting the exchange–correlation energies.For example,the first-order correction of Hubbard parameters works fairly well in reproducing the band structures.[30]However,the parameterUis the simplest approximation of exchange–correlation energies and the value may change by pressure and other thermodynamical variables. Varying pressure,Umay reach different self-consistent values.[30]To remedy those issues, the dynamical mean-field theory (DMFT) is later combined with DFT to accurately predict the electronic structures of FeO. Most recent studies can reproduce its Mott insulator at ambient conditions with an energy gap of∼2 eV and transformation to the metal state at about 60–70 GPa.[31–33]

Fig. 1. The electrical conductivity of FeO at various temperatures. At 59 GPa,FeO is a semiconductor(blue symbol). The electrical conductivity of FeO decreases with the increasing temperature at above megabar pressures (red symbol), which is typical metallic behavior. The figure inset is the electrical conductivity variation of FeO as a function of pressure. Three black stars are from the shock wave experiment of Ref.[26],and the rest of the data are from the diamond anvil cell experiments of Ref.[28].

Fig.2.The isomer shift(IS)and quadrupole splitting(QS)of iron oxides obtained from M¨ossbauer spectroscopy as functions of pressure.[29,34–37] The purple dotted line represents the possible phase transition of Fe3O4. The orange dotted line represents the possible phase transition of Fe2O3,and the orange area represents the phase transition region of FeO. The discontinuities of IS and QS values of iron oxides are used to indicates possible phase transitions.

3. Site-selective electronic transition in hematite Fe2O3

The structural phase diagram of ferrous hematiteα-Fe2O3(space groupRc)is more complicated than w¨ustite. It proceeds through a set of site-selective structural transformations under highP–Tconditions.[7,34]The ambientα-Fe2O3transforms to a Rh2O3-II-type (Pbcn) phase at 40 GPa and exhibits slight lattice distortion to a GdFeO3-perovskite-type(Pbnm)phase at 50 GPa. High-pressure polymorphs of Fe2O3contain the post-perovskiteη-Fe2O3(Cmcm)and a metastable orthorhombicθ-Fe2O3(Aba2).[7,38–40]Both of them are stable in a wide pressure range of 60–120 GPa,which covers the entire deep lower mantle.

At ambient pressure,α-Fe2O3is a wide-gap Mott insulator with a bandgap width of 2.0–2.7 eV, where the 0.7 eV bandgap range is inferred from different studies.[41,42]Recent DFT+DMFT results show that the closure of the bandgap under pressure is due to the iron and oxygen band broadening and the FeO6octahedra crystal-field splitting in eg–t2g.The bandgap closes at approximately 50 GPa in the Rh2O3-II-type phase, suggesting the onset of metallization.[43]Kuneet al.predicted that the insulator–metal transition in Fe2O3results from the gap closing mechanism[44]rather than the local state transition. The local state transition suggests that the insulator–metal transition is induced by the electron states transforming from localized to itinerant.[45]

Fig. 3. Electrical conductivity of Fe2O3 with perovskite (square)[46] and α phase (circle).[48] Below decompression to 34.5 GPa, Fe2O3 is a semiconductor(black symbol). α-Fe2O3exhibits the same temperature behavior at ambient pressure. The temperature variation of electrical conductivity shows that perovskite type Fe2O3 becomes a metal at above 44.5 GPa(red symbol). The inset is the resistance of Fe2O3 as a function of pressure at 300 K,[46] which shows an abrupt decrease of about 6 orders of magnitude at 40–60 GPa.

Cold compressing a piece of Fe2O3and measuring its electrical resistance measurements also show an abrupt 6 orders of magnitude decrease between 40 GPa and 60 GPa and the resistance reaches 1 Ω at above 60 GPa and ambient temperature(Fig.3).[46]Greenberget al. regarded the metallization as induced by a site-dependent collapse in the 3d electrons of iron(octahedralBsites).[46]For theAba2 phase,Shimet al.employed M¨ossbauer spectroscopy and x-ray diffraction to show that Fe2O3features reduced electron mobility near the Fermi level,which is evidence of strongly correlated metal (Fig. 2).[34]Such electronic structure transition is also implied by the x-ray absorption spectroscopy with the crystalfield splitting of the FeKedge, indicating that Fe2O3transforms from a high-spin insulator to a low-spin metal.[47]

4. Metallization of ferrous-ferric valence mixture magnetite Fe3O4

Magnetite (Fe3O4) is the oldest known magnetic material. It has an inverse spinel structure at ambient conditions, in which Fe3+occupies the tetrahedral site and (Fe2+,Fe3+)holds the octahedral site. The ambient phase transforms to a high-pressure phasePbcmat 29.7 GPa and 300 K,[49]and further to an orthorhombic phase (h-Fe3O4) with the CaTi2O4-type structure(Bbmm)at above 41 GPa and 1000 K or 65.1 GPa and 300 K,[50,51]where the Fe3+is sixfold and the Fe2+is eightfold coordinated in distorted FeO6octahedra.

Similar to FeO, a pioneering study using the full potential linear muffin-tin-orbital (FPLMTO) method also underestimates the bandgap of magnetite and h-Fe3O4.[50]Those theoretical results are against the pressure-dependent resistance measurements, in which Fe3O4is a semiconductor until∼50 GPa, where the resistance decreases rapidly and reaches a few Ω at above megabar pressure.[52]And at above∼50 GPa,the resistance of h-Fe3O4exhibits positive values of dR/dTwith metallic features[50](Fig. 4). At the same pressure, M¨ossbauer spectroscopy finds a correlation breakdown(Mott–Hubbard transition) of Fe3+at∼50 GPa, which suggests closure of the Fe-d and O-p gap.[52]Other M¨ossbauer study on Fe3O4indicates a structural phase transition at about 30 GPa(Fig.2).[37]

Fig.4. The temperature-dependent resistance of high-pressure h-Fe3O4 after laser annealing. The solid red circles taken at 51 GPa are measured upon synthesis.[50] The open circles measured at lower pressures are pressure quenched from 51 GPa. It shows that the quenched metastable Fe3O4 keeps the metallic properties. The inset (a) is the resistance of Fe3O4 as a function of pressure at 300 K taken from Ref.[53], which is conducted up to 30 GPa.The data inset(b)is also the temperature-dependent resistance of Fe3O4 without heating,which show the metallic behavior at 18.9 GPa.[54]

So far, all three natural-occurring iron oxides are metalized under high pressure but their critical metallization pressure points are not correlated with their stoichiometry. Instead, the crystal structure becomes the controlling factor of their electronic structures.We sketch a semiconductor to metal phase diagram of the three iron oxides in Fig.5.While we still lack experimental data points on the electrical conductivity of Fe2O3before it decomposes to Fe5O7,[7]the diagram shows that the metalized areas of iron oxides are largely overlapped and cover large regions from the mid to the lowermost mantle.

Fig. 5. Semiconductor to metal phase diagram of iron oxides. The translucent blue and green zones stand for the P–T regions of metallic FeO and Fe3O4, respectively. The data points are reported from literature.[7,26,28,46,50,53] Each color and symbol are labeled by the data points. The high-P–T electrical conductivity of Fe2O3 is still unknown below its decomposition conditions. We use the adiabatic geotherm from Katsura.[55] Grey lines sketch the overlapping P–T regions of Fe3O4 and FeO.

5. Pilot studies of other mFeO·nFe2O3 mixtures

Most of the recently reported unconventional stoichiometry of high-pressure iron oxides can be described as the mixed-valence state of FeO and Fe2O3, in the chemical formula ofmFeO·nFe2O3. For instance, Fe4O5is 2FeO·Fe2O3.This mixed-valence structure can be expressed as building blocks of octahedral FeO6into a post-perovskite type Fe2O3or the structural assembly of FeO6octahedra and FeO6trigonal prisms (Fig. 6).[7,8,56]Previous research suggests that the stability of Fe4O5in the upper mantle extends to oxygen fugacity higher than the diamond stability field[57]and it also can form solid solutions with Mg2+and Cr3+in the deep Earth.[58]While Fe5O6can be stable in the upper mantle with the oxygen fugacity in equilibrium with the diamond formed.[58]Other research focused on Fe4O5and Fe5O6showed that the stability of Fe5O6is above 10 GPa and 1600 K.And Fe4O5only exists at relatively low temperatures.[59]

Due to the similarity of basic structural motifs, the electronic structures ofmFeO·nFe2O3resemble that of natural iron oxides. For example, DFT+DMFT calculation results reveal that the total density of states of Fe5O6at the Fermi level is dominated by the Fe-3d bands and possesses bulky quasi-particle peaks, which indicates that Fe5O6is metallic at high pressure.[60]Employing the same calculation method,the electronic conduction in Fe4O5is constrained by the Fe-3d bands,which are dominant by the total density of states at the Fermi levelEF.[61]They conclude that Fe4O5stays metallic nature from ambient conditions through the core-mantle boundary (up to 140 GPa).[61]Although more electronic investigations on thesemFeO·nFe2O3mixtures are called, they should be expected to undergo similar electronic structure transitions which have the same electronic mechanism.

Fig.6.The series of the high-pressure crystal structures of iron oxides with O2.Brown colors represent octahedral FeO6,while blue colors represent trigonal FeO6. Different packing orders with face-shared and edge-shared FeO6 blocks consist of high-pressure iron oxide phases with different crystal structures.

6. Complex bonding and electronic structure in oxygen-enriched FeO2

Except for the iron oxides with usual O2,FeO2with concurrent O2and O could be stable with a pyrite-type structure above 76 GPa and 1500 K, equivalent to approximately 1800 km depth.[9]Its crystal structure has co-existed Fe–O and O–O bonds and can be regarded as FeO holding extra O2.[58]The synthesized FeO2has a semi-transparent color but it is still technically challenging to perform direct measurement on its bandgap.[9]In the meantime,DFT+DMFT calculations demonstrate that FeO2is a metal with wide overlapping of t2gandσ* bands.[62]From the derived density of states,the O2dimer adopts two electrons near an iron atom,causing its orbital to span approximately 3 eV right above the Fermi level. A following up work by the same theoretical group defines the electronic spin-state transition of Fe in FeO2,[63]which explains the previous argument of Hubbard parametersUin modeling the system.[64]Coincidently,the metallization of FeO2is accompanied with spin transition,[63]which is also found in its hydrogen-bearingε-FeOOH.[20]

7. Discussion and implication

Our review of previous works demonstrates that all iron oxides display metalized characteristics under high-pressure conditions. In Earth’s deep interior, such metallization generally starts from the mid-lower mantle and keeps the metallic state at least to the lowermost mantle. Together with other components such as oxyhydroxide,[20,65]davemaoite(CaSiO3),[66]and Al2O3[67]that are possible metals in the lower mantle,the deep Earth’s interiors may feature high conductivity patches that generate electromagnetic phenomena and drive the geodynamics.

The electrical and thermal conductivities of the metalized minerals are coupled through the Wiedemann–Franz law.[68]Through this relation, the thermal conductivity is positively associated with the electrical conductivity of the metal. High thermal conductivity will facilitate the thermal convection,increase the heat flux,and finally influence the thermal dynamic at the mantle. The high thermal conductivity of metallic ironoxides also implies a more stable and thicker D′′layer,[69]and an increase in plume temperature[70]that breaks through the phase boundary.

High electrical conductivity of metals will also heat certain areas at the base of the mantle, which will induce buoyancy to increase above the liquid outer core directly affecting the core dynamo process.[71,72]The strength of the magnetic field,which is largely determined by the core dynamo process,will be certainly influenced by the quasi-periodic variation.And the poloidal magnetic field structure at the lowest mantle will also be modified,or even determined by the high electrical conductivity. The energy of the poloidal magnetic field will increase with the rising conductivity of the mantle.[73]

8. Conclusions

In this work,we review the evolution of crystal and electronic structures of typical iron oxides and iron oxyhydroxides under high pressure conditions. Both theoretical and experimental works show that metallization is a universal phenomenon among those materials, whose bandgaps between the conduction band and valence band are closed by pressure. Meanwhile,their electrical conductivities soar to exhibit metallic behaviors. The metallic iron oxides represent an important class of materials for studying the electronic structures of strong-correlated matters. Its potential to form high electrical and thermal conductivity patches in the mantle will also impose profound influences on the dynamos of the mantle and core.

Acknowledgements

This work is supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant Nos. 42150101 and 42150102).Qingyang Hu is supported by the CAEP Research Project(Grant No.CX20210048)and a Tencent Xplorer Prize(Grant No.XPLORER-2020-1013).