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High pressure-temperature behavior of long-chain alkanes

ORAL

Abstract

Carbonaceous chondrites are undifferentiated meteorites that provide valuable insights into the Earth’s pristine chemistry and host a variety of hydrocarbons including polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) and alkanes. It is speculated that these meteorites might have delivered life-essential organic matter to the Earth. Therefore, it is important to understand the survivability of these hydrocarbons inside the meteorites at extreme pressures and temperatures on entry to the Earth’s atmosphere. However, the P-T stability of the long-chain alkanes is not well known. Thus, we have undertaken an in-depth investigation of tricosane-C23H48. Our preliminary study on the high-pressure behavior of C23H48 indicates that upon compression it transforms from a ‘linear’ to a ‘bent’ configuration (Basu et al., 2020). To investigate the combined effect of alkane chain-length and P-T, we explored octadecane-C18H38. Upon compression, we observe a similar transition from a linear to bent configuration, albeit at a lower pressure. On laser-heating in a diamond cell, we note dissociation of C18H38 into smaller alkane chains, elemental carbon (C), and molecular hydrogen (H2), with the formation of binary van der Waals mixtures.
Reference: Basu, A., et al., (2020), Journal of Applied Physics, 127, 105901.

Presenters

  • Abhisek Basu

    Earth, Ocean & Atmospheric Science, Florida State University

Authors

  • Abhisek Basu

    Earth, Ocean & Atmospheric Science, Florida State University

  • Christina E Schiffert

    Earth, Ocean & Atmospheric Science, Florida State University

  • Patrick Murphy

    Earth, Ocean & Atmospheric Science, Florida State University

  • Mainak Mookherjee

    Earth, Ocean & Atmospheric Science, Florida State University

  • Bianca Haberl

    Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Neutron Scattering Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN, USA, Neutron Scattering Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge National Lab

  • Reinhard Boehler

    Geophysical Laboratory, Carnegie Institution for Sciences, Washington DC 20015, USA, Neutron Scattering Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory