Sodium bonds with helium at extremely high pressures of 15 and 113 Gigapascals
by noreply@blogger.com (brian wang) from NextBigFuture.com on (#2C0VE)
Can helium bond with other elements to form a stable compound? Students attentive to Utah State University professor Alex Boldyrev's introductory chemistry lectures would immediately respond "no." And they'd be correct - if the scholars are standing on the Earth's surface.
But all bets are off, if the students journey to the center of the Earth, i la Jules Verne's Otto Lidenbrock or if they venture to one of the solar system's large planets, such as Jupiter or Saturn.
"That's because extremely high pressure, like that found at the Earth's core or giant neighbors, completely alters helium's chemistry," says Boldyrev, faculty member in USU's Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry.
Boldyrev's colleagues confirmed computationally and experimentally that sodium, never an earthly comrade to helium, readily bonds with the standoffish gas under high pressure to form the curious Na2He compound. These findings were so unexpected, Boldyrev says, that he and colleagues struggled for more than two years to convince science reviewers and editors to publish their results.
Image depicting structure formed by helium and sodium. On Earth, helium doesn't bond with other elements. Yet, under high pressure, such as conditions found at the Earth's core or on larger planets, it does, say USU researchers. Credit: Ivan Popov.
Nature Chemistry - A stable compound of helium and sodium at high pressure
Read more
But all bets are off, if the students journey to the center of the Earth, i la Jules Verne's Otto Lidenbrock or if they venture to one of the solar system's large planets, such as Jupiter or Saturn.
"That's because extremely high pressure, like that found at the Earth's core or giant neighbors, completely alters helium's chemistry," says Boldyrev, faculty member in USU's Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry.
Boldyrev's colleagues confirmed computationally and experimentally that sodium, never an earthly comrade to helium, readily bonds with the standoffish gas under high pressure to form the curious Na2He compound. These findings were so unexpected, Boldyrev says, that he and colleagues struggled for more than two years to convince science reviewers and editors to publish their results.
Image depicting structure formed by helium and sodium. On Earth, helium doesn't bond with other elements. Yet, under high pressure, such as conditions found at the Earth's core or on larger planets, it does, say USU researchers. Credit: Ivan Popov.
Nature Chemistry - A stable compound of helium and sodium at high pressure
Read more