Fe-C and Fe-H systems at pressures of the Earth's inner core
Zulfiya G. Bazhanova, Artem R. Oganov, Omar Gianola

TL;DR
This study uses ab initio simulations to investigate Fe-C and Fe-H systems at Earth's inner core pressures, identifying stable compounds and assessing their potential to explain core density, favoring carbon over hydrogen as a light element.
Contribution
The paper determines the most stable Fe-C and Fe-H compounds at inner core pressures and evaluates their viability as light elements in Earth's core, providing new structural and compositional insights.
Findings
Fe2C is the most stable carbide at core pressures.
FeH3 and FeH4 are stable hydrides with interesting structures.
Carbon can account for the core density with realistic concentrations.
Abstract
The solid inner core of the Earth is predominantly composed of iron alloyed with several percent Ni and some lighter elements, Si, S, O, H, and C being the prime candidates. There have been a growing number of papers investigating C and H as possible light elements in the core, but the results are contradictory. Here, using ab initio simulations, we study the Fe-C and Fe-H systems at inner core pressures (330-364 GPa). Using the evolutionary structure prediction algorithm USPEX, we have determined the lowest-enthalpy structures of possible carbides (FeC, Fe2C, Fe3C, Fe4C, FeC2, FeC3, FeC4 and Fe7C3) and hydrides (Fe4H, Fe3H, Fe2H, FeH, FeH2, FeH3, FeH4) and have found that Fe2C (Pnma) is the most stable iron carbide at pressures of the inner core, while FeH, FeH3 and FeH4 are stable iron hydrides at these conditions. For Fe3C, the cementite structure (Pnma) and the Cmcm structure…
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