Submitted by VillagerNo4 t3_11zbuiw in askscience
Jon_Beveryman t1_je7kkey wrote
Reply to comment by wwjgd27 in Does the metal in the solid core of a rocky planet have any special properties? by VillagerNo4
(A) there is no thermally induced HCP phase in iron at atmospheric pressure, in pure iron the HCP epsilon phase is solely a high pressure phase, (B) I don't see what the temperature vs pressure effect size has to do with any of this - the assertion was that in the core you'd have the same crystal structure as you would on the surface and it is observably not true.
wwjgd27 t1_je7njji wrote
FCC in the (111) planar direction is the same as HCP. We just call it something else but effectively it’s the same right?
Jon_Beveryman t1_je7oxqk wrote
No, they're not the same. The (111) plane in FCC and the (1000) plane in HCP are equivalent but if you look down the [111] and [1000] directions you will see that the stacking sequence is different. This is usually described as ABCABC (FCC) vs ABAB (HCP). This is, for instance, why you can have FCC <--> HCP phase transformations produced solely by stacking faults.
wwjgd27 t1_je8nghy wrote
I thought ABAB stacking was for graphite and other graphitic structures since each stack of graphene is missing a carbon atom at the center of the hexagonal rings which would give it the symmetry allowing for ABCABC stacking in both HCP (0001) planes and FCC (111) planes? Interesting conversation by the way!
[deleted] t1_je8r5i1 wrote
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