Abstract

Raman spectroscopy and synchrotron x-ray diffraction measurements of ammonia (NH(3)) in laser-heated diamond anvil cells, at pressures up to 60 GPa and temperatures up to 2500 K, reveal that the melting line exhibits a maximum near 37 GPa and intermolecular proton fluctuations substantially increase in the fluid with pressure. We find that NH(3) is chemically unstable at high pressures, partially dissociating into N(2) and H(2). Ab initio calculations performed in this work show that this process is thermodynamically driven. The chemical reactivity dramatically increases at high temperature (in the fluid phase at T > 1700 K) almost independent of pressure. Quenched from these high temperature conditions, NH(3) exhibits structural differences from known solid phases. We argue that chemical reactivity of NH(3) competes with the theoretically predicted dynamic dissociation and ionization.

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