Abstract
We report the discovery of Al34Ni9Fe2, the first natural known periodic crystalline approximant to decagonite (Al71Ni24Fe5), a natural quasicrystal composed of a periodic stack of planes with quasiperiodic atomic order and ten-fold symmetry. The new mineral has been approved by the International Mineralogical Association (IMA 2018-038) and officially named proxidecagonite, which derives from its identity to periodic approximant of decagonite. Both decagonite and proxidecagonite were found in fragments from the Khatyrka meteorite. Proxidecagonite is the first natural quasicrystal approximant to be found in the Al-Ni-Fe system. Within this system, the decagonal quasicrystal phase has been reported to transform at ~940 °C to Al13(Fe,Ni)4, Al3(Fe,Ni)2 and the liquid phase, and between 800 and 850 °C to Al13(Fe,Ni)4, Al3(Fe,Ni) and Al3(Fe,Ni)2. The fact that proxidecagonite has not been observed in the laboratory before and formed in a meteorite exposed to high pressures and temperatures during impact-induced shocks suggests that it might be a thermodynamically stable compound at high pressure. The most prominent structural motifs are pseudo-pentagonal symmetry subunits, such as pentagonal bipyramids, that share edges and corners with trigonal bipyramids and which maximize shortest Ni–Al over Ni–Ni contacts.
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Introduction
The first decagonal quasicrystalline (QC) phase found in nature, decagonite Al71Ni24Fe51,2, was discovered in the Khatyrka meteorite, a CV3 carbonaceous chondrite3,4,5,6,7,8. Its structure consists of a periodic stack of planes that each have a crystallographically forbidden ten-fold symmetric, quasiperiodic arrangement of atoms. The finding followed the discovery of icosahedrite Al63Cu24Fe139,10, the first quasicrystal discovered in nature, which displays three-dimensional icosahedral symmetry and is quasiperiodic in all directions. The chemical compositions of both decagonite and icosahedrite match those of the QC phases previously synthesized in a laboratory setting at standard pressure11,12.
In the search through Khatyrka meteoritic fragments recovered from a 2011 expedition to the Koryak Mountains in far eastern Russia3,4,5,6, various other novel intermetallic phases have been uncovered13,14,15,16, including a second Al-Cu-Fe icosahedral QC phase that differs from icosahedrite and that is the first QC to be discovered in nature before being synthesized in the laboratory17. However to date, no natural periodic approximants to quasicrystals have been reported.
Periodic approximant is an accepted technical term that refers to a crystalline solid with similar chemical composition to a QC, but whose atomic arrangement is slightly distorted so that the symmetry conforms to the conventional laws of three-dimensional crystallography. Crystalline approximants can be considered the missing link between QCs and crystals and are very useful because they provide a well-defined starting point for models of the local atomic structure of the corresponding quasicrystals. The discovery of approximants forming at high pressure may indicate the existence and stability of yet more types of QCs at non-standard conditions.
Herein we report the discovery of the first natural periodic approximant to the decagonal QC, Al71Ni24Fe5. The approximant, with chemical formula Al34Ni9Fe2, does not correspond to any previously recognized synthetic18 or natural phase. The mineral was named proxidecagonite, derived from “periodic approximant of decagonite” (from the truncated Latin word proxǐmus followed by the name of the quasicrystalline mineral decagonite). The new mineral and its name have been approved by the Commission on New Minerals, Nomenclature and Classification of the International Mineralogical Association (IMA 2018-038). The holotype material is deposited in the collections of the Museo di Storia Naturale, Università degli Studi di Firenze, Via La Pira 4, I-50121, Firenze, Italy, catalogue number 3291/I.
Proxidecagonite was found in one of the meteoritic fragments of the same Khatyrka meteorite labeled Grain 126. All recovered fragments of Khatyrka including Grain 126 have been shown to include non-metallic minerals with CV3-like oxygen isotopic compositions4,7,13,14 confirming their common meteoritic origin. The Khatyrka meteorite formed 4.5 billion years ago during the earliest stages of the solar system and contains evidence of a heterogeneous distribution of pressures and temperatures during impact shock, in which some portions of the meteorite reached at least 5–10 GPa and 1200–1500 °C. Based on noble gas studies, the most recent strong shock experienced by Khatyrka took place in space a few 100 Ma8. Lin et al.7 have also shown that some of the metallic Al-alloys in Khatyrka pre-dated the shock.
Results
Description of the sample
Grain 126 is dark grey in incident light with diverse silicate and metallic fragments visible. No fusion crust is preserved on the sample. X-ray computed tomography studies showed the presence of a large khatyrkite grain (bright areas in the upper panel of Fig. 1) clearly attached to the meteorite fragment (dark areas in the upper panel of Fig. 1), as typically observed for other fragments of the Khatyrka meteorite4,7,13,14. Detailed examination by scanning electron microscopy, single-crystal X-ray diffraction, micro-computed tomography and transmission electron microscopy of fragments from Grain 126 associated to proxidecagonite revealed the presence of trevorite, diopside, forsterite, ahrensite, clinoenstatite, nepheline, coesite, stishovite, pentlandite, Cu-bearing troilite, icosahedrite, khatyrkite, taenite, Al-bearing taenite, steinhardtite, decagonite, hollisterite, stolperite and kryachkoite4,5,7,13,15,16,17. The recovery of different Al-Ni-Fe crystalline (steinhardtite) and QC (decagonite) intermetallic phases, motivated a careful search for other metallic fragments, which led to the discovery of a particle with composition close to that of the known Al-Ni-Fe decagonal QC but with different diffraction characteristics.
Description of the selected Al-Ni-Fe approximant
Proxidecagonite exhibits an anhedral morphology and does not show inclusions of or intergrowths with other minerals. The maximum grain size found to date is ~20 μm. The color is grey to black, the streak is black and the lustre is metallic. In plane-polarized incident light, proxidecagonite is weakly to moderately bireflectant and not pleochroic. Internal reflections are absent. Between crossed polars, the mineral is anisotropic, without characteristic rotation tints. The reflectance was measured in air and the reflectance data (Rmin − Rmax and λ/nm) are 28.8–31.2 (471.1), 29.4–32.0 (548.3), 30.6–32.8 (586.6), and 31.5–33.7 (652.3). The most promising proxidecagonite fragment was hand-picked from a TEM grid and studied by means of electron microprobe and X-ray diffraction techniques. The chemical data (Table 1) provided the empirical formula (based on 45 atoms pfu) of Al33.99Ni9.00Fe1.98Si0.02Co0.01, ideally Al34Ni9Fe2. The fragment was then studied by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. The investigated Al34Ni9Fe2 fragment exhibits the o’-Al13Co4 structure19 (orthorhombic, space group Pnma) with parameters a = 29.013(3), b = 8.156(1), c = 12.401(2) Å, V = 2934.4(7) Å3 and Z = 4.
Atomic structure
The structure of proxidecagonite, in which all Fe and Ni sites were crystallographically refined as Ni so that the composition is “Ni44Al136”, generally maximizes shortest Ni–Al over Ni–Ni contacts. The atoms are not close-packing, although vacancies have been examined as a contributing stabilization factor in a similar structure in Al13Co420. Rather than close-packing of the atoms as typically observed in intermetallic compounds, the structure can be described from a close-packing of corner-sharing, empty (non-centered) polyhedra as follows: Al6 octahedra, Ni2Al3 and NiAl4 trigonal bipyramids, Al7 distorted pentagonal bipyramids, and Al5 square pyramids. Figure 2 shows the breakdown of the structure across 4 unit cells with the pseudo-pentagonal symmetry subunits shown in the inset. Moreover, each set of Al-centered Ni2Al10 elongated pentagonal bipyramids and Ni-centered Al7 distorted pentagonal bipyramids share corners with trigonal bipyramids in the pentagonal planes (Fig. 2c,d). On the other hand, the non-centered distorted pentagonal bipyramids share edges with three trigonal bipyramids (Fig. 2b). All polyhedra with pseudo-pentagonal symmetry tile the unit cell in a wave-like manner in the ac-plane with voids between them filled by the other polyhedra, which are also arranged in a wave-like fashion, so that Ni atoms intervene for maximal Ni–Al polar-covalent interactions within the structure. A previous description of this structural arrangement in o’-Al13Co4 highlights the pentagonal bipyramids formed by either Al–Al or Co–Co contacts alone19, which in “Ni44Al136” is not sufficient to describe the preference for shortest Ni–Al over Ni–Ni contacts.
Electronic structure
The density of states (DOS) curves provide a means to rationalize the atomic structure from electronic distributions and atomic orbital interactions. In the DOS of “Ni44Al136” (Fig. 3), the Fermi energy, EF, sits in a shallow pseudogap, signifying the electronic stability of the crystallographic structure. As part of the rigid-band approximation, which considers the total number of electrons within the system by integrating the DOS and moving EF along the DOS according to the number of electrons, EF of the experimentally ideal composition “Fe8Ni36Al136”, with 16 electrons fewer than Ni44Al136, also sits at the edge of the peak as it tapers to the pseudogap. The Ni 3d orbitals dominate below EF with a width of ~3.5 eV and most strongly interacts with the Al 3p orbitals. Near and above EF, the relative contribution of Ni 3d orbitals decreases whereas that of Al increases, thus depicting the polar-covalent interactions between the filled Ni(3d) and partially filled Al(3p) orbitals that give rise to a preference to structurally maximize Ni–Al over Ni–Ni shortest contacts.
Discussion
The new approximant Al34Ni9Fe2 described here has not been observed as a product of laboratory synthetic experiments, and it represents the second example of a composition discovered in nature prior to discovery in the laboratory. It was found18 that at ~940 °C the decagonal QC decagonite (Al71Ni24Fe5) transforms to Al13(Fe,Ni)4, Al3(Fe,Ni)2 and the liquid phase, and between 800 and 850 °C to Al13(Fe,Ni)4, Al3(Fe,Ni) and Al3(Fe,Ni)2. Although Al13(Fe,Ni)4, the composition with the Al/(Ni + Fe) ratio closest to proxidecagonite (3.25 and 3.09, respectively), shows chemical similarities with proxidecagonite, it crystallizes in the monoclinic Al13Fe4 structure corresponding to the recently described hollisterite (reported by Ma et al.16 with the ideal chemical formula Al3Fe). Also, Ni dominates significantly over Fe in proxidecagonite, which represents another difference with respect to the other two known synthetic periodic approximants in the Al-Ni-Fe system, i.e. Al76Ni9Fe15 (monoclinic, space group C2/m21) and Al72Ni9Fe19 (hexagonal, P63/mmc22).
Previous work on high pressure phases in the Al-Ni-Fe system were confined to static pressure and did not produce proxidecagonite23. Likely to be more relevant are dynamic shock-induced high pressure experiments as it was recently demonstrated that shock conditions may generate previously unknown crystal and QC phases in both the Al-Cu-Fe24,25 and Al-Ni-Fe26 systems. Based on the examples found thus far, it appears that new unpredicted Ni-rich phases become stabilized over Fe-rich phases at high pressures. By combining studies of natural periodic and aperiodic phases found in Khatyrka with high-pressure diamond anvil experiments27,28,–,29 and laboratory shock experiments24,25,–,26, we plan to elucidate the kinetic and thermodynamic stability of QCs and discover other novel phases stabilized at high pressure. Aside from their intrinsic interest, the new phases may provide insights on previously unobserved early solar-system processes.
Methods
Studied material
Proxidecagonite was investigated by means of SEM (scanning electron microscopy), EMP-WDS (electron microprobe, wavelength dispersive spectrometry), single-crystal and powder X-ray diffraction techniques.
Scanning electron microscopy
The instrument used was a Zeiss - EVO MA15 Scanning Electron Microscope coupled with an Oxford INCA250 energy-dispersive spectrometer, operating at 25 kV accelerating potential, 500 pA probe current, 2,500 cps as average count rate on the whole spectrum, and a counting time of 500 s. Samples were sputter-coated with 30-nm-thick carbon film.
Electron microprobe
Quantitative analyses were carried out using a JEOL JXA 8600 microprobe (WDS mode, 15 kV, 10 nA, 1 μm beam size, counting times 20 s for peak and 10 s for background). High spatial resolution was achieved using conditions of 13 kV, 7 nA. For the WDS analyses the Kα lines for all the elements were used. Variable counting times were used: 30 s for Al, Ni and Fe, and 60 s for the minor elements Mg, Si, Cr, P, Co, Cu, Cl, Ca, Zn, and S. Replicate analyses of synthetic Al53Ni42Fe5 were used to check accuracy and precision. The crystal fragments were found to be homogeneous within analytical error. The standards used were: Al metal, synthetic Ni3P (Ni, P), synthetic FeS (Fe), Mg metal, Si metal, Cr metal, Co metal, Cu metal, synthetic CaCl2 (Ca, Cl) and synthetic ZnS (Zn, S). Magnesium, Si, Cr, P, Co, Cu, Cl, Ca, Zn, and S were found to be equal to or below the limit of detection (0.01 wt%). Four point analyses on different spots were performed on the three samples. Table 1 reports the chemical data (in wt% of elements) for proxidecagonite.
Single-crystal X-ray diffraction and structure refinement
Single-crystal X-ray studies were carried out using an Oxford Diffraction Xcalibur 3 diffractometer equipped with an Oxford Diffraction CCD detector, with graphite-monochromatized MoKα radiation (λ = 0.71073 Å), working conditions 50 kV × 50 nA and with 250 s exposure time per frame; the detector-to-sample distance was 6 cm. Proxidecagonite is orthorhombic, space group Pnma, with unit-cell parameters: a = 29.013(3), b = 8.156(1), c = 12.401(2) Å, V = 2934.4(7) Å3 and Z = 4.
Single-crystal X-ray diffraction intensity data of proxidecagonite were integrated and corrected for standard Lorentz polarization factors with the CrysAlis RED package30. The program ABSPACK in CrysAlis RED30 was used for the absorption correction. Statistical tests (|E2 − 1| = 1.091) and systematic absences agrees with the space group Pnma. The crystal structure was refined, by means of the program SHELXL31, starting from the atomic coordinates reported for the orthorhombic approximant o’-Al13Co419, which exhibits a similar unit-cell and the same space group. A least-squares refinement on F2 using these heavy-atom positions and isotropic temperature factors produced an R factor of ~10%. We did not observe any partially occupied/split positions in our model. The occupancy of all the sites was left free to vary (Ni vs. vacancy and Al vs. vacancy). All the structural sites were found to be consistent with a pure occupation by Ni and Al, respectively, and then fixed to the resulting value. Given the close scattering value between Ni and Fe, we refined all the Ni positions using the Ni curve. Neutral scattering curves for Ni and Al were taken from the International Tables for X-ray Crystallography32. At the last stage, with isotropic atomic displacement parameters for all atoms and no constraints, the residual value settled at R1 = 2.46% for 2360 observed reflections [Fo > 4σ(Fo) level] and 110 parameters and at R1 = 3.03% for all 4537 independent reflections. Inspection of the difference Fourier map revealed that maximum positive and negative peaks were 0.63 and 1.33 e−/Å3, respectively. The formula obtained from the structure refinement (neglecting the Ni-Fe difference), Al34Ni11, is in excellent agreement with that obtained from electron microprobe data Al33.99Ni9.00Fe1.98Si0.02Co0.01.
Table S1 reports details of the selected crystal, data collection, and refinement. Atomic coordinates and equivalent isotropic displacement parameters are given in Table S2 whereas selected bond distances are given in Table S3.
Crystallographic data (CCDC 1851139) can be obtained free of charge from The Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre via www.ccdc.cam.ac.uk/data_request/cif.
X-ray powder diffraction
X-ray powder diffraction data (Table S4) were obtained with an Oxford Diffraction Xcalibur PX Ultra diffractometer fitted with a 165 mm diagonal Onyx CCD detector and using copper radiation (CuKα, λ = 1.54138 Å). The working conditions were 40 kV × 45 nA with 4 hours of exposure; the detector-to-sample distance was 7 cm. The program Crysalis RED30 was used to convert the observed diffraction rings to a conventional powder diffraction pattern. The least squares refinement gave the following unit-cell values: a = 28.861(2), b = 8.1335(7), c = 12.3442(9) Å, and V = 2897.7(3) Å3.
Electronic structure calculations
To assess the distribution of electronic charge within the system and the electronic features that affect the atomic structure, Bader charge33 and densities of states (DOS) were calculated using first-principles methods in the Vienna ab initio simulation package (VASP 5.4.4)34,35,36. The VASP setup utilizes plane waves with energy cutoffs at 500 eV and a self-consistent convergence limit criterion of 0.01 meV. The exchange-correlation potential is approximated non-locally by treating the electron densities as well as their gradients as the basis set in the generalized-gradient approximant (GGA) as constructed by Perdew, Burke, and Ernzerhof (PBE)37 and the orbital basis set includes Ni (3d84s2) and Al (3s23p1) for a total of 848 electrons in “Ni44Al136”. To rationalize which site might prefer Fe to Ni, Bader charge was also calculated for “Co44Al136”, for a total of 804 electrons (Table S5). In the Bader charge calculation of “Co44Al136”, sites that are more charge-rich prefer Ni to Fe. The DOS was plotted using 3001 k-points from an automatic mesh in the energy region −8– +2 eV.
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Acknowledgements
We wish to thank the 2011 expeditionary team composed by: Christopher L. Andronicos, Vadim V. Distler, Michael P. Eddy, Alexander Kostin, Valery Kryachko, Glenn MacPherson, William Steinhardt and Marina Yudovskaya. Special thanks are also due to Lincoln Hollister and Nan Yao for their invaluable help in the different stages of this project. This work was supported in part by “Progetto di Ateneo 2015” of the University of Florence, Italy (L.B.), the National Science Foundation-MRSEC program through New York University (DMR-0820341; P.J.S.). We are also grateful to the anonymous donor who supported the 2011 expedition to Chukotka through a grant to Princeton University (P.J.S., Principal Investigator).
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The study was conceived by L.B. and P.J.S. L.B. performed the SEM, electron microprobe, single-crystal and powder X-ray diffraction studies. L.B. and J.P. wrote the paper with input from P.J.S. All the authors discussed the results and commented on the manuscript.
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Bindi, L., Pham, J. & Steinhardt, P.J. Previously unknown quasicrystal periodic approximant found in space. Sci Rep 8, 16271 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-34375-x
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-34375-x
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