When atoms join together to form
molecules of more than two atoms they adopt fixed shapes, as the molecular
bonds are held at set angles to one-another. For example water (H2O)
molecules have a ‘v’ shape as the two H-O bonds are held at an angle of 120° to
one-another rather than 180°. Crystals are formed because certain atoms
arrange themselves naturally into large complex molecules in which these
bond-angles become extended into plains of symmetry. Conventional crystals have
rotational symmetries of two, three, four or six; where a crystal with a
rotational symmetry of two will show the same arrangement of atoms if rotated
through 180°,
a crystal with a rotational symmetry of three will show the same arrangement of
atoms if rotated through 120°, etc.
While crystals do not always reveal these symmetries to the naked eye,
this does explain the dramatic symmetrical structures often seen in naturally
occurring crystals, and how gem-cutters are able to cut jewels into distinctive
shapes.
Quasicrystals are structures in which
atoms arrange themselves into regular patterns with more complex structures,
typically lacking true rotational symmetry, but having approximate rotational
symmetries forbidden to regular crystals, such as seven or ten. Such structures
were first theorized in the 1960s, and have been created artificially in the
laboratory since the 1980s, but only a single naturally occurring quasicrystal
has ever been discovered, in a rock sample from the Khatyrka Ultramafic Zone of the Koryak Mountains in
Chukotka in the Russian Far East, later identified as a carbonaceous chondrite
(stony meteorite).
In a paper published in the
journal Scientific Reports on 13 March 2015, a group of scientists led by Luca Bindi of the Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra at the Università di Firenze
describe a second naturally occurring quasicrystal from the Khatyrka Meteorite,
from a sample recovered by a 2011 expedition to the Koryak Mountains.
The original crystal had a
chemical composition of Al63Cu24Fe13 (i.e 24 copper
and 13 iron atoms for every 63 Aluminium atoms), and an icosahedral rotational
symmetry (i.e. an approximately 20-fold symmetry), which it was theorized could
only have formed at very high temperatures and pressures, followed by rapid
cooling (which would have prevented the structure recrystallizing into a more
conventional structure). Other minerals from the sample, and subsequently
recovered samples of the Khatyrka Meteorite, have also suggested a high
temperature and pressure creation followed by rapid cooling, and an isotope
derived date of about 4.5 billion years ago for the formation of this material
– early in the history of the Solar System.
The new quasicrystal has a
chemical composition of Al71Ni24Fe5 (i.e. 24
nickel and 5 iron atoms for every 71 atoms of aluminium) and a decagonal
symmetry (i.e. 10 rotational symmetry planes). All aluminium-dominated
quasicrystals produced to date have required high temperatures and pressures to
form, rapid cooling to stabilize and a low oxygen environment. Aluminium-nickel-iron
quasicrystals with decagonal have been formed in laboratory since 1989, and can
only form at temperatures of between 1120 and 1200 K.
The top panel shows micro CT-SCAN 3D-images (at different rotations) of
the whole Grain 126. The brighter and the darker regions are Cu-Al metals and
meteoritic silicates, respectively. The bottom panel shows a SEM-BSE image of
Al71Ni24Fe5 quasicrystal (QC) in apparent growth
contact with ‘‘olivine’’ (‘‘Ol’’). The surface of the quasicrystal appears to exhibit
growth steps. The image also contains sodalite (Sod). Bindi et al. (2015).
Both the known Khatyrka
quasicrystals show a high degree of structural perfection, which suggests rapid
heating to a temperature of in excess of 1000 K, and possibly as high as 1500
K, under conditions of high pressure, followed by rapid cooling. This suggests
that the most likely explanation for these quasicrystals is that they are
shock-induced structures, formed in a collision between two bodies in the early
Solar System.
See also...
Glassy spherules are found in many geologic strata, and are commonly taken as evidence of meteorite strikes. They can be formed by the melting of mineral grains in the atmosphere at temperatures in excess of 3000 ˚C, and meteorites typically strike the...
The lunar regolith provides an archive of data that can potentially be used to date the chronology of ancient impact events on the Moon. The Apollo Moonlander missions of the 1970s returned numerous samples of impact melt breccias (rocks made up of heat-fused pieces of older rocks) which can potentially be used...
The Chelyabinsk Meteorite detonated in the atmosphere over the southern Russia on 15 February 2013 with an equivalent energy to 500 kilotons of TNT. From the size of the explosion it is estimated to have been an object with an equivalent diameter of 17-20 m (i.e. if it had...
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