Physics World 03月13日
Earth’s core could contain lots of primordial helium, experiments suggest
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一项由日本和台湾科学家进行的实验表明,地球深处的氦可能与铁结合形成稳定的化合物。这项研究由东京大学的竹泽春树和广濑敬及其同事进行,他们认为地核可能蕴藏着大量的原始氦-3,从而改变我们对地球内部的理解。研究人员利用激光加热金刚石砧盒,在高达54 GPa的压力下,促使铁和氦发生反应,生成了铁和氦的分子晶格,即使在释放压力后,这些结构依然保持稳定。这一发现暗示,地球形成初期,类似反应可能发生在地球核心,将大量原始氦-3困在其中,形成了一个巨大的氦储存库,并逐渐释放到地表。

🧪实验表明,地球深处的氦可能与铁结合形成稳定的化合物,挑战了氦是惰性气体的传统认知。研究人员在实验室中模拟了地核的高压环境,成功合成了铁-氦化合物。

🌋火山岩中异常高的氦-3与氦-4同位素比率为了解地核中的氦含量提供了线索。氦-3并非由放射性产生,而是行星内部的原始物质,在火山岩中的富集表明它可能被困在地球内部。

💎研究人员利用激光加热金刚石砧盒,在极端压力下促使铁和氦发生反应,并通过X射线衍射和二次离子质谱分析,确定了化合物的分子结构。实验结果得到了第一性原理计算的支持。

🌍实验结果表明,地球形成初期,铁和氦可能在地核中发生反应,将大量原始氦-3困在其中,形成了一个巨大的氦储存库。这解释了火山岩中氦-3的来源,并为我们理解地球内部的组成提供了新的视角。

Helium deep with the Earth could bond with iron to form stable compounds – according to experiments done by scientists in Japan and Taiwan. The work was done by Haruki Takezawa and Kei Hirose at the University of Tokyo and colleagues, who suggest that Earth’s core could host a vast reservoir of primordial helium-3 – reshaping our understanding of the planet’s interior.

Noble gases including helium are normally chemically inert. But under extreme pressures, heavier members of the group (including xenon and krypton) can form a variety of compounds with other elements. To date, however, less is known about compounds containing helium – the lightest noble gas.

Beyond the synthesis of disodium helide (Na2He) in 2016, and a handful of molecules in which helium forms weak van der Waals bonds with other atoms, the existence of other helium compounds has remained purely theoretical.

As a result, the conventional view is that any primordial helium-3 present when our planet first formed would have quickly diffused through Earth’s interior, before escaping into the atmosphere and then into space.

Tantalizing clues

However, there are tantalizing clues that helium compounds could exist in some volcanic rocks on Earth’s surface. These rocks contain unusually high isotopic ratios of helium-3 to helium-4. “Unlike helium-4, which is produced through radioactivity, helium-3 is primordial and not produced in planetary interiors,” explains Hirose. “Based on volcanic rock measurements, helium-3 is known to be enriched in hot magma, which originally derives from hot plumes coming from deep within Earth’s mantle.” The mantle is the region between Earth’s core and crust.

The fact that the isotope can still be found in rock and magma suggests that it must have somehow become trapped in the Earth. “This argument suggests that helium-3 was incorporated into the iron-rich core during Earth’s formation, some of which leaked from the core to the mantle,” Hirose explains.

It could be that the extreme pressures present in Earth’s iron-rich core enabled primordial helium-3 to bond with iron to form stable molecular lattices. To date, however, this possibility has never been explored experimentally.

Now, Takezawa, Hirose and colleagues have triggered reactions between iron and helium within a laser-heated diamond-anvil cell. Such cells crush small samples to extreme pressures – in this case as high as 54 GPa. While this is less than the pressure in the core (about 350 GPa), the reactions created molecular lattices of iron and helium. These structures remained stable even when the diamond-anvil’s extreme pressure was released.

To determine the molecular structures of the compounds, the researchers did X-ray diffraction experiments at Japan’s SPring-8 synchrotron. The team also used secondary ion mass spectrometry to determine the concentration of helium within their samples.

Synchrotron and mass spectrometer

“We also performed first-principles calculations to support experimental findings,” Hirose adds. “Our calculations also revealed a dynamically stable crystal structure, supporting our experimental findings.” Altogether, this combination of experiments and calculations showed that the reaction could form two distinct lattices (face-centred cubic and distorted hexagonal close packed), each with differing ratios of iron to helium atoms.

These results suggest that similar reactions between helium and iron may have occurred within Earth’s core shortly after its formation, trapping much of the primordial helium-3 in the material that coalesced to form Earth. This would have created a vast reservoir of helium in the core, which is gradually making its way to the surface.

However, further experiments are needed to confirm this thesis. “For the next step, we need to see the partitioning of helium between iron in the core and silicate in the mantle under high temperatures and pressures,” Hirose explains.

Observing this partitioning would help rule out the lingering possibility that unbonded helium-3 could be more abundant than expected within the mantle – where it could be trapped by some other mechanism. Either way, further studies would improve our understanding of Earth’s interior composition – and could even tell us more about the gases present when the solar system formed.

The research is described in Physical Review Letters.

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地核 氦-3 高温高压实验 地球化学
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