Abstract

The temperatures induced in crystalline calcite (CaCO 3) upon planar shock compression (95–160 GPa) are reported from two-stage light gas gun experiments. Temperatures of 3300–5400 K are obtained by fitting six-channel optical pyrometer radiances in the 450–900 nm range to the Planck gray-body radiation law. Thermodynamic calculations demonstrate that these temperatures are some 400–1350 K lower than expected for vibronic excitations of the lattice with a 3 R/mole-atom specific heat ( R is gas constant). The temperature deficit along the Hugoniot is larger than that expected from only melting. In addition to melting, it appears likely that shock-induced decomposition of calcite occurs behind the shock front. We modeled disproportionation of calcite into CaO (solid) plus CO 2 (gas). For temperature calculations, specific heat at constant volume for 1 mole of CO 2 is taken to be 6.7 R as compared to 9 R in the solid state; whereas a mole of calcite and a mole of CaO have their solid state values 15 R and 6 R, respectively. Calculations suggest that the calcite decomposes to CaO and CO 2 at ∼110±10 GPa along the Hugoniot. Recent reanalysis of earlier VISAR measurements of particle velocity profiles [1] indicates that calcite shocked to 18 GPa undergoes disproportionation at much lower pressures upon isentropic expansion.

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