Springer Verlag, Physics and Chemistry of Minerals, 8-9(33), p. 575-585
DOI: 10.1007/s00269-006-0105-y
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We investigated the valence state and spin state of iron in an Al-bearing ferromagnesian silicate perovskite sample with the composition (Mg0.88Fe0.09)(Si0.94Al0.10)O3 between 1 bar and 100 GPa and at 300 K, using diamond cells and synchrotron Mössbauer spectroscopy techniques. At pressures below 12 GPa, our Mössbauer spectra can be sufficiently fitted by a “two-doublet” model, which assumes one ferrous Fe2+-like site and one ferric Fe3+-like site with distinct hyperfine parameters. The simplest interpretation that is consistent with both the Mössbauer data and previous X-ray emission data on the same sample is that the Fe2+-like site is high-spin Fe2+, and the Fe3+-like site is high-spin Fe3+. At 12 GPa and higher pressures, a “three-doublet” model is necessary and sufficient to fit the Mössbauer spectra. This model assumes two Fe2+-like sites and one Fe3+-like site distinguished by their hyperfine parameters. Between 12 and 20 GPa, the fraction of the Fe3+-like site, Fe3+/∑Fe, changes abruptly from about 50 to 70%, possibly due to a spin crossover in six-coordinate Fe2+. At pressures above 20 GPa, the fractions of all three sites remain unchanged to the highest pressure, indicating a fixed valence state of iron within this pressure range. From 20 to 100 GPa, the isomer shift between the Fe3+-like and Fe2+-like sites increases slightly, while the values and widths of the quadruple splitting of all three sites remain essentially constant. In conjunction with the previous X-ray emission data, the Mössbauer data suggest that Fe2+ alone, or concurrently with Fe3+, undergoes pressure-induced spin crossover between 20 and 100 GPa.