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Hexaferrum
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Hexaferrum and epsilon iron (ε-Fe) are for the hexagonal close-packed (HCP) phase of that is stable only at extremely high pressure.

A 1964 study at the University of Rochester mixed 99.8% pure α-iron powder with , and pressed a 0.5-mm diameter pellet between the flat faces of two diamond anvils. The deformation of the NaCl lattice, as measured by x-ray diffraction (XRD), served as a pressure indicator. At a pressure of 13 GPa and room temperature, the body-centered cubic (BCC) ferrite powder transformed to the HCP phase in Figure 1. When the pressure was lowered, ε-Fe transformed back to ferrite (α-Fe) rapidly. A change of −0.20 cm3/mole ± 0.03 was measured. Hexaferrum, much like , is more dense than ferrite at the phase boundary. A experiment confirmed the diamond anvil results. was chosen for the new phase to correspond with the HCP form of .T. Takahashi & W.A. Bassett, " High-Pressure Polymorph of Iron," Science, Vol. 145 #3631, 31 Jul 1964, p. 483–486.

The between the alpha, gamma and epsilon phases in the unary phase diagram of iron has been calculated as T = 770 K and P = 11 GPa,G. Krauss, Principles of Heat Treatment of Steel, ASM International, 1980, p. 2, . although it was determined at a lower temperature of T = 750 K (477 °C) in Figure 1. The for hexaferrum is hP2 and its is P63/mmc. ASM Handbook, Vol. 3: Alloy Phase Diagrams, ASM International, 1992, p. 2.210, .Powder Diffraction File 00-034-0529, International Centre for Diffraction Data, 1983.

Another study concerning the ferrite-hexaferrum transformation determined that it is a rather than equilibrium transformation.

While hexaferrum is purely academic in metallurgical engineering, it may have significance in . The pressure and temperature of Earth's iron are on the order of 150–350 GPa and 3000 ± 1000 °C. An extrapolation of the austenite-hexaferrum phase boundary in Figure 1 suggests hexaferrum could be stable or metastable in Earth's core. For this reason, many experimental studies have investigated the properties of HCP iron under extreme pressures and temperatures. Figure 2 shows the compressional behaviour of ε-iron at room temperature up to a pressure as would be encountered halfway through the outer core of the Earth; there are no points at pressures lower than approximately 6 GPa, because this allotrope is not thermodynamically stable at low pressures but will slowly transform into α-iron.

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