Recovery of a high-pressure phase formed under laser-driven compression

Gorman, M. G.; McGonegle, D.; Tracy, S. J.; Clarke, S. M.; Bolme, C. A.; Gleason, A. E.; Ali, S. J.; Hok, S.; Greeff, C. W.; Heighway, P. G.; Hulpach, K.; Glam, B.; Galtier, E.; Lee, H. J.; Wark, J. S.; Eggert, J. H.; Wicks, J. K.; Smith, R. F.
2020
PHYSICAL REVIEW B
DOI
10.1103/PhysRevB.102.024101
The recovery of metastable structures formed at high pressure has been a long-standing goal in the field of condensed matter physics. While laser-driven compression has been used as a method to generate novel structures at high pressure, to date no high-pressure phases have been quenched to ambient conditions. Here we demonstrate, using in situ x-ray diffraction and recovery methods, the successful quench of a high-pressure phase which was formed under laser-driven shock compression. We show that tailoring the pressure release path from a shock-compressed state to eliminate sample spall, and therefore excess heating, increases the recovery yield of the high-pressure. phase of zirconium from 0% to 48%. Our results have important implications for the quenchability of novel phases of matter demonstrated to occur at extreme pressures using nanosecond laser-driven compression.