Curious kinetic behavior in silica polymorphs solves seifertite puzzle in shocked meteorite

Sci Adv. 2015 May 8;1(4):e1500075. doi: 10.1126/sciadv.1500075. eCollection 2015 May.

Abstract

The presence of seifertite, one of the high-pressure polymorphs of silica, in achondritic shocked meteorites has been problematic because this phase is thermodynamically stable at more than ~100 GPa, unrealistically high-pressure conditions for the shock events in the early solar system. We conducted in situ x-ray diffraction measurements at high pressure and temperatures, and found that it metastably appears down to ~11 GPa owing to the clear difference in kinetics between the metastable seifertite and stable stishovite formations. The temperature-insensitive but time-sensitive kinetics for the formation of seifertite uniquely constrains that the critical shock duration and size of the impactor on differentiated parental bodies are at least ~0.01 s and ~50 to 100 m, respectively, from the presence of seifertite.

Keywords: high pressure; kinetics; metastable phase; seifertite; shocked meteorite; silica polymorphs.