Crystallography365

Blogging a crystal structure a day in 2014

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Contributed by

Helen Maynard-Casely

What is our planet made out of? (5) Silicate perovskite

What does it look like?

Just too keep you on track with where we are in the Earth now! Image by C. McCammon taken from the ESRF website

Just to keep you on track with where we are in the Earth now! Image by C. McCammon taken from the ESRF website.

What is it?

So we're now in a very unfamiliar place, 650 km below the Earth's surface. But to make us feel at home, another familiar structure pops up. At this point in the Earth's interior the pressures and temperatures are such that our original planet-forming material olivine is transformed to a perovskite structure. Each of the silicon atoms are now bonded to six oxygen (yellow in the picture) atoms and form the blue octahedra. The magnesium and iron (shown by the green atoms in the picture) sit in between these.

Where did the structure come from?

This silicate perovskite structure is #9003456 in the Crystallography Open Database.