Abstract

Ice VII and ice X are the two most dominant phases, stable over a large pressure range between 2 and 150 GPa and made of fundamentally different chemical bonding. Yet, the two ice phases share a similar bcc-based crystal structure and lattice constants, resulting in a challenge to discern the crystal structure of ice VII and ice X. Here, we present well-resolved X-ray diffraction data of H2O in quasi-hydrostatic H2 and He pressure media, clearly resolving the two ice phases to 130 GPa and the dissociative nature of ice VII to X transition occurring at 20-50 GPa in H2O-H2 and 60-70 GPa in H2O-He. The present diffraction data permits, for the first time, the accurate determination of the bulk moduli B0 of 225 (or 228) GPa for ice X and 6.2 (or 4.5) GPa for ice VII, in H2O-H2 (or H2O-He), which can provide new constraints for Giant planetary models.

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