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4 9 S e p t e m b e r 2 0 1 6 www.ehprg2016.org PROGRAMME

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Page 1: 4–9 September 2016

4–9 September 2016

www.ehprg2016.org

PROGRAMME

Page 2: 4–9 September 2016

2 Programme

Programme Overview

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Page 3: 4–9 September 2016

Programme 3

Floor Plan of the Conference Site at ARVENA Hotel

State of printing

Exh

ibition

Hall

Page 4: 4–9 September 2016

4 Programme

Content

Conference Organisers ............................................................................................ 5

EHPRG Committee Members 2016 .......................................................................... 6

Welcome Note of the Conference Chairs ................................................................ 7

Welcome Note of the EHPRG Chairman .................................................................. 8

Welcome Note of the Mayor of Bayreuth ............................................................... 9

General Information ................................................................................................ 10

Social Programme .................................................................................................... 14

Excursions ................................................................................................................ 16

Information for Presenters ...................................................................................... 18

List of Exhibitors ...................................................................................................... 20

Plenary Lectures ...................................................................................................... 22

EHPRG Award Winnes 2016 .................................................................................... 30

Programme Overview • Chairs-Speakers ................................................................ 32

Scientific Programme Monday, 5 September 2016 ................................................................... 36 Tuesday, 6 September 2016 ................................................................... 50 Wednesday, 7 September 2016 .............................................................. 60 Thursday, 8 September 2016 .................................................................. 64 Friday, 9 September 2016 ....................................................................... 74

Poster Presentations Poster Session I • Tuesday, 6 September 2016 ...................................... 79 Poster Session II • Thursday, 8 September 2016 .................................... 91

Participant List ......................................................................................................... 103

Page 5: 4–9 September 2016

Programme 5

Conference Organisers

Conference ChairsProf. Dr. Dr. h. c. Leonid DubrovinskyBavarian Research Institute of Experimental Geochemistry and Geophysics (BGI)University of Bayreuth95440 Bayreuth (DE)

Prof. Dr. Dr. h. c. Natalia DubrovinskaiaMaterial Physics and Technology at Extreme ConditionsLaboratory of CrystallographyUniversity of Bayreuth95440 Bayreuth (DE)

International Advisory CommitteeI. A. Abrikosov (SE) R. Boehler (DC/US) M. Bremholm (DK)D. Christofilos (GR) P. Dera (IL/US) A. Dewaele (FR)M. I. Eremets (DE) K. Friese (DE) M. Hanfland (FR)H. Huppertz (AT) T. Irifune (JP) S. Klotz (FR)D. P. Kozlenko (RU) J. P. Loveday (GB) M. I. McMahon (GB)H.-K. Mao (US) M. A. Millot (CA/US) M. Merlini (IT)A. Muñoz González (ES) G. Rozenberg (IL) K. Syassen (DE)J. S. Tse (CA) B. Winkler (DE)

Conference ManagementConventus Congressmanagement & Marketing GmbHJuliane Börner/Doreen KühleCarl-Pulfrich-Straße 107745 Jena (DE)Phone +49 3641 31 16-347/-319Fax +49 3641 31 [email protected]

Design/LayoutLayout krea.tif-art UG (haftungsbeschränkt)Print SIBLOG | Schneller ist besser! Logistik GmbHCirculation 400Editorial Deadline 1 August 2016

Page 6: 4–9 September 2016

6 Programme

EHPRG Committee Members 2016

/Term of Office is indicated

Executive CommitteeK. V. Kamenev, University of Edinburgh, GB, Chairman/2018N. Dubrovinskaia, University of Bayreuth, DE, Secretary/2018 I. Loa, CSEC, University of Edinburgh, GB, Treasurer/unlimitedS. Klotz, Université P&M Curie, Paris, FR, Treasurer Delegate/unlimited

Committee MembersI. Arvanitidis, Aristotle University, Thessaloniki, GR/2016 N. Brooks, Imperial College London, GB/2018 S. Buga, TISNCM, Troitsk, RU/2018 A. Friedrich, Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg, DE/2017G. Gabarino, ESRF, Grenoble, FR/2017 J. Contreras-Garcia, Université P&M Curie, Paris, FR/2018 J. A. Gonzalez, Universidad de Cantabria, Santander, ES/2016 F. Gorelli, Università di Firenze, IT/2017 U. Häussermann, Stockholm University, SE/2016 A. Katrusiak, University of Poznań, PL/2016 F. Meersman, Antwerp University, BE/2017 M. Paz-Pasternak, Tel Aviv University, IL/2017 J. Prchal, Charles University, Prague, CZ/2017 J.-M. Recio, Universidad de Oviedo, ES/2017 A. San Miguel, LPMCN, Université Lyon 1, Lyon, FR/2016 J. Saraiva, University of Aveiro, PT/2018S. Scandolo, ICTP, Trieste, IT/2018

Ex-officio membersF. Rodríguez, Universidad de Cantabria, ES, President of the AIRAPT C. Van Der Beek, École Polytechnique, Palaiseau, FR, Chairman of theCondensed Matter Division of the European Physical Society

Page 7: 4–9 September 2016

Programme 7

Welcome Note of the Conference Chairs

Dear Colleagues and Participants of the 54th European High Pressure Research Group (EHPRG)Meeting on High Pressure Science and Technology!

In 2016 our annual forum, aimed at a fruitful exchange of ideas and views in a broad field of high pressure research, will take place in the city of Bayreuth, the capital of Upper Franconia, which is a part of the state of Bavaria in southern Germany. The city will provide you with unique cultural and natural environment that will make your stay in Bayreuth joyful and inspirational.

The University of Bayreuth was founded in 1975 and celebrated its 40th birthday in 2015. The high pressure and high temperature research is one of the main scientific focuses of the University and the Bavarian Research Institute of Experimental Geo-chemistry and Geophysics (BGI) is the central institution of the University since 1984. The state-of-the-art experimental and analytic equipment for the characterization of materials gives the University of Bayreuth a unique standing throughout Europe and permits new methodical developments. The University of Bayreuth welcomes you to visit its high pressure laboratories through guided scientific tours during the time of the 54th EHPRG Meeting.

We wish you a successful Meeting with fruitful discussions, encouraging disputes and conversations. We believe that your stay in Bayreuth will charge you with new ideas and impressions!

Sincerely yours,

Leonid Dubrovinsky Natalia DubrovinskaiaConference Chair Conference Chair

Page 8: 4–9 September 2016

8 Programme

Welcome Note of the EHPRG Chairman

Dear Friends and Colleagues,

On behalf of the European High-Pressure Research Group Committee as well as the International Advisory Committee and the Local Organising Committee I would like to welcome you to the 54th EHPRG conference in Bayreuth, Germany.

High-pressure research has been growing over recent years and this is reflected by the steadily increasing number of participants at annual EHPRG meetings. This year there will be well over 300 talks and posters presented by participants from 29 countries. They will be reporting on a number of exciting scientific breakthroughs and significant instrumentation developments made since the joint AIRAPT-EHPRG 2015 conference in Madrid.

This year’s conference has 20 Microsymposia organised into 36 sessions and covering a wide range of topics in high-pressure research – some conventional and some of which are just emerging. The conference organisers and the Microsymposia Chairs, who themselves are recognised experts in their field of research, have done an excel-lent job in attracting a great line-up of plenary and invited speakers. Have a look at the conference programme and you will see that EHPRG-54 is a truly representative international meeting which will enable its participants to keep abreast of the latest developments in high-pressure research.

I wish you all an enjoyable conference, fruitful discussions and new collaborations!

Konstantin KamenevEHPRG Chairman

Page 9: 4–9 September 2016

Programme 9

Welcome Note of the Mayor of Bayreuth

Dear Sir or Madam, Dear Scientists,

I’d like to welcome you to Bayreuth – a city that has to offer a lot in totally different areas that is worth further contemplation. This of course also includes our University. Physics, Chemistry and material science play an important role in the University pro-file. A visible sign is among other things the “Emil-Wartburg-Foundation”. It promotes research projects in the field of physics and is distinguished by several prices for the special services in Physics. In the chemical sector, for example, the University regularly achieves top marks, in particular, for the achievements in the field of polymer and colloid research. Concerning the area of material sciences, it is researched intensively and successfully in Bayreuth how different materials behave under high pressure and extremely low or high temperatures.

The cultural city of Bayreuth, however, is particularly associated with the name of Richard Wagner, Franz Liszt, Jean Paul and Margravine Wilhelmine. They made the city of Bayreuth world famous; have left their mark in many different ways in the city. So I may recommend the newly opened Richard Wagner Museum, among other things, the UNESCO World Heritage, the Margrave’s Wilhelmine Opera House is indeed currently being renovated, but the householder, the “bayerische Schlösser- und Seenverwaltung” has created a very interesting presentation. And everyone who visits Bayreuth has to see the “Festspielhaus” of Richard Wagner, located at the “Green Hill”. At present the festival of flower and garden is taking place in Bayreuth – the Landesgartenschau. This is worth more than just one visit, too.

Bayreuth, distinguished conference participant, thus offers all – an entire special com-bination of science, art, culture and recreation, which also includes a good local beer and a Franconian meal.

Be welcome, enjoy your stay and come once again!I wish you all an insightful conference and a good time in Bayreuth.

Yours

Brigitte Merk-ErbeMayor of Bayreuth

Page 10: 4–9 September 2016

10 Programme

General Information

VenueARVENA Kongress HotelEduard-Bayerlein-Straße 5a95445 Bayreuth (DE)

Date4–9 September 2016

Conference LanguageThe lectures will be held in English.

RegistrationIt would be desirable to register online in the forerun of the conference. The Registra-tion Desk as well as the Quick/Self-Check-In will be open during the following times:Sunday 16.00–19.00Monday–Tuesday, Thursday 08.00–18.30Wednesday 08.00–14.00Friday 08.00–10.30

During these times, all pre-registered delegates who have already paid the registra-tion fee will be receiving a bar code via e-mail prior to the conference. This code needs to be printed out or saved on smartphones. There will be several Quick/Self- Check-In counters which can be used to print out your personal name badge. Our staff will be there to assist you. Please be prepared to present a proof of your advanced payment and, if applicable, a proof of your student status. Here you can also pick up your con-ference materials. On-site registration is also possible and credit card or cash payment will be accepted. Registration fees are as follows:

Regular 600 EURStudent*/Retired Scientists** 500 EURAccompanying Person 250 EUR

Welcome Reception incl.Social Evening incl.City and Scientific Excursions incl.

* Please provide proof of status via fax +49 3641 31 16-244 or e-mail [email protected] and quote EHPRG 2016** 70 years or older. The submission of an abstract is required.

Page 11: 4–9 September 2016

Programme 11

General Information

Name BadgeParticipants, accompanying persons and exhibitors are kindly requested to wear their name badge during all conference events. Admittance to the scientific sessions, ex-hibition and social events will be refused if the required badge cannot be presented. Lost badges will be replaced at the Registration Desk upon presentation of a proof of registration and an identity card.

Certificate of ParticipationYou can pick up your certificate of participation at the Conference Registration desk.

WLAN and Internet AreaA wireless network will be available throughout the whole building and will be free of charge. The access code will be announced on-site.

CateringFree lunches and soft drinks will be offered to all delegates during lunchtime at des-ignated desks in the industrial exhibition and in the restaurant. Tea and coffee will be available free of charge in the morning and in the afternoon coffee breaks.

ExhibitionEHPRG 2016 will host a trade exhibition. For a listing of the exhibitors please refer to the corresponding section in this programme (see page 20).

Exhibition Opening TimesSunday 18.00–21.00Monday–Tuesday, Thursday 09.00–18.00Wednesday 09.00–14.00Friday 09.00–10.30

Page 12: 4–9 September 2016

General Information

12 Programme

Hotel AccommodationA broad range of hotels as well as low-budget accommodations are available in Bayreuth. We have reserved a contingent of hotel rooms. Please consult www.ehprg2016.org/travel-hotels/hotels/ for more details.

City MapThe city map is enclosed to the conference materials. Do not hesitate to ask the confer-ence staff at the Registration Desk for special places you would like to visit.

Location Plan Hotel, Parking and Public TransportA location plan of the central part of Bayreuth can be found on page 13. For a floor plan of the conference site at the ARVENA Kongress Hotel see page 3. The ARVENA Kongress Hotel owns an underground garage with 140 parking places. Please inquire information on public transport in your hotel or have a look at the website of the VGN www.vgn.de.

EHPRG General AssemblyThe EHPRG General Assembly, including the EHPRG Award Lectures, will take place on Wednesday, 7 September 2016 from 11.45–13.30 in the Great Hall K9.

The High Pressure Community Photo will be taken on Tuesday, 6 September 2016 in the time from 12.20–12.40. The meeting place will be announced at the Opening Ceremony.

EHPRG discussion session: High-pressure neutrons in the next decadeDate: 7 SeptemberTime: 14.00–16.00Room: Great Hall K9Chairs: Malcolm Guthrie and John S. Loveday

The neutron landscape is changing rapidly with the new liquid-target sources hitting their stride even as the more established facilities continue to upgrade. In addition, the next-generation European Spallation Source (ESS), now under construction in Sweden, will deliver neutrons from 2019. Together, these facilities represent an enormous op-portunity for the high-pressure community.Please come to this discussion session to learn more about the new capabilities and to explore the key scientific and technical goals for high pressure neutron research in the next decade. The meeting is open to all interested parties whether or not they have previous experience with neutron scattering.

Page 13: 4–9 September 2016

General Information

Programme 13

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Page 14: 4–9 September 2016

14 Programme

Social Programme

Welcome ReceptionThe Welcome Reception will take place in the industrial exhibition in the ARVENA Kongress Hotel on Sunday, 4 September 2016 from 18.00–21.00. Enjoy the first meet-ing with your colleagues and other delegates in a relaxed atmosphere with music and light refreshments. On Sunday, the registration will be open from 16.00–19.00 in the entrance area as well. The Welcome Reception is included in the registration fee, but you are kindly asked to book separately through the registration website.

Opening CeremonyThe EHPRG 2016 will officially be opened on Monday, 5 September 2016 at 08.45 in the Great Hall K9. The chairman of the EHPRG and both conference chairs will welcome all delegates.

Social Evening (SE)Date Thursday, 8 SeptemberStart 19.30Bus shuttle will be provided between 18.30 and 19.00 (at latest) from the ARVENA HotelReturn from Burg Rabenstein will be provided between 23:00 and 00.00

The Social Evening will take place on Thursday, 8 September 2016 at 20:00 at Burg Ra-benstein. Burg Rabenstein is an old castle built in the 12th Century. The former home of earls and lords is nowadays used as a hotel and event location. It is located in the Aibachtal in the heart of the Franconian Switzerland approximately 30 min away from the conference venue. The musical highlight will be a performance by the Feuerbach Quartett. Existing since 2013 the band arranges famous pop songs in classical string quartet music. The mixture of the songs and their personal note could make you forget briefly that you are not listening to the original. We invite you to join a memorable evening in this wonderful setting.

Closing Ceremony The Farewell will take place directly after the final sessions including the Closing Ceremony in the Great Hall K9 on Friday, 9 September 2016 at 12.20.

Page 15: 4–9 September 2016

Programme 15

University Campus Map

© Universität Bayreuth

© Universität Bayreuth

2

1 BGI Building

HP-Lab of the Laboratory of Crystallography

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Page 16: 4–9 September 2016

16 Programme

Excursions

Maisel Brewery (MB)Date Wednesday, 7 SeptemberStart 14.30/14.40/14.50/15.00End 15.30/15.40/14.50/16.00

Maisel’s combines the art of brewing with the world of beer that can be experienced with all senses. In an area of over 4.500 m² visitors can get a glimpse on the produc-tion on one of the famous beers in Upper Franconia. The included brewery museum shows the history of the brewing culture and shelters a collection of over 5.500 beer glasses and mugs.

Richard-Wagner-Museum (RWM)Date Wednesday, 7 SeptemberStart 15.00/16.30End 16.30/18.00

Discover the world of Richard Wagner! The tour will guide you through the stages of his life and work at the “Haus Wahnfried”, the “Siegfried Wagner-Haus” and the his-tory of the Bayreuth Festival in the “Neubau”.

© www.pixabay.com

Page 17: 4–9 September 2016

Programme 17

Excursions

Festspielhaus Bayreuth (FH)Date Wednesday, 7 SeptemberStart 18.00End 18.45

Have a look at the Festspielhaus from another side: discover the specialities of the auditorium, get a glimpse at the factory and explore the stage. Uncountable informa-tion will be provided during the tour to give you an inside view on the theatre and festival business.

© Lorenzo Moscia

Scientific Guided Tour to BGI Laboratories (BGI)Date Wednesday, 7 SeptemberStart 14.30/16.30/17.00End 16.15/18.15/18.45

The Bavarian Research Institute of Experimental Geochemistry and Geophysics (BGI) and the Research Group of Materials Physics and Technology at Extreme Conditions at the Laboratory of Crystallography of the University of Bayreuth welcome you to their scientific laboratories. Please have a look at the campus map on page 15.

Shuttle busses will be provided in front of the ARVENA hotel. The trip to the BGI Labo-ratories takes about 15 minutes by bus.

Tickets for an excursion and a BGI lab tour will be printed on your badge at the Regis-tration Desk in Bayreuth.

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18 Programme

Information for Presenters

Submitting your Presentation/Technical InformationPlease prepare your presentation as PDF, MS Office Power-Point2010/2007 for Windows or key for Macintosh DVD in 4:3 aspect ratio.

A presentation notebook with a PDF reader and MS Office Power-Point2010/2007 will be provided. The use of personal notebooks is possible upon agreement. However, it may interrupt the flow of the programme in the lecture hall. Please provide an adapter for VGA if necessary.

A notebook, presenter and laser pointer are available at the speaker podium in the lecture halls. A technical supervisor can help you.

Please note: Certain encodings for video and audio files could lead to problems. Please visit our speakers preview area.

Should you wish to use non-digital equipment, please contact us at [email protected] name will be shown down centered in the software that is installed in the confer-ence rooms as well as a countdown at the bottom on the right. Please consider this in the preparation of your presentation.

Speakers Service CentreThe Speakers Service Centre (SSC) is located on the ground floor directly next to the Registration Desk. Please note the sign-posting on site or ask at the Registration Desk.

To guarantee a smooth running programme please submit your presentation no later than 2 hours before the session with your presentation will start. You will have the opportunity to view and/or edit your presentation. Professional staff and equipment will be available for you to arrange and preview your presentation.For submission, please use an USB flash drive, CD or DVD disc which must not be pro-tected with software.

Speaking TimePlease prepare your presentation for the allotted amount of time. Session chairs are asked to interrupt you, in case that you should exceed your time limit. Speaking time is assigned as follows (speaking + discussion time):

1. Plenary talks 45+15 minutes2. Invited talks 30+10 minutes3. Regular talks 15+5 minutes

Page 19: 4–9 September 2016

Programme 19

Information for Presenters

PostersAll posters are divided in 2 groups including the topics of the Microsymposia:Group 1: 1, 5, 7, 9, 12, 15, 17 (see also on page 79ff)Group 2: 3, 4, 6, 10, 11, 14, 15, 18, 19 (see also on page 91ff)The session for group 1 will be held on 6 September from 14.00–16.00 in the K1+2. The session for group 2 will be held on 8 September from 14.00–16.00 in the K1+2. The Poster presenters are asked to be present during their poster sessions.

Poster size must not exceed either DIN A0 (841 width x 1189 height mm) or Arch E (36 x 48 inch; 914 x 1219 mm), the poster boards are 1200 x 1500 mm. The posters should not be laminated. Mounting materials will be provided on-site.All poster boards will be labelled with a poster number. You will find your poster num-ber in the programme book on page 79–102. For group 1 posters should be pinned on Sunday, 4 September until 18.00 and removed on Tuesday, 6 September until 18.00. For group 2 posters should be pinned on Wednesday, 7 September until 18.00 and removed on Friday, 9 September until 12.00. Please adhere to this schedule. Posters that have not been removed by that time will be considered as waste.

E-PosterFurthermore, we are pleased to announce that we will provide you with the opportunity to show your poster as e-poster all days of the congress.

Best Student Poster PrizeThe two Best Student Poster Prizes will be sponsored by Taylor & Francis with a sub-scription for the High Pressure Research Journal. The prizes presentation ceremony will be held during the Closing Ceremony. All students who would like to participate in the competition can get a sticker at the Registration Desk to mark their posters.

Best Image Contest “Art in Science”At the EHPRG 2016 three prizes will be awarded for impressive images (microscope or any other images related to the high-pressure research) of scientific and/or artistic value. The award presentation ceremony will be held during the Closing Ceremony. The best 3 images will be shown on easels during the whole time of the conference.

Legend to the Scientific ProgrammeNames in bold indicate the plenary speakers. Names in italic and underlined indicate the invited speakers. Presenting authors are underlined.

Name Plenary speakerName Invited speakerName Presenting author

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20 Programme

List of Exhibitors

We thank the following companies for their special support:

Industrial ExhibitorsAlmax easyLab bvba (Diksmuide/BE)

attocube systems AG (München/DE)

CamCool Research Limited (Cambridge/GB)

chemPUR Feinchemikalien undForschungsbedarf GmbH (Karlsruhe/DE)

Linseis Messgeräte GmbH (Selb/DE)

MAXIMATOR GmbH (Nordhausen/DE)

Micro Support Co., Ltd. (Shizuoka/JP)

NOVA SWISS (Cesson/FR) www.novaswiss.com

SARL BETSA (Nangis/FR)

Technodiamant BvbA (Herenthout/BE)

Industrial SponsorsBruker AXS (Karlsruhe/DE)Princeton Instruments (Trenton, NJ/US)SITEC-Sieber Engineering AG (Maur/CH)

Scientific SponsorsDeutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Bonn/DE)

State at printing

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Did youKnow?

*European High Pressure Research Group

Conventus is the ProfessionalCongress Organiser of the 54th EHPRG* Meeting

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22 Programme

Plenary Lecture • Robert C. Liebermann

Department of Geosciences, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY/US and Mineral Physics Institute, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY/US

Monday, 5 September 2016, 09.00, Great Hall K9

Biographical sketchAfter obtaining an undergraduate degree at the California Institute of Technology [1964-Advisor: Don Anderson] and a graduate degree in Columbia University [1969-Ad-visor: Orson Anderson] in geophysics, Bob joined the research faculty of the Depart-ment of Geophysics & Geochemistry [later the Research School of Earth Sciences] of the Australian National University. During the following 6 years, he built an ultrasonics laboratory and collaborated with A. E. (Ted) Ringwood on measuring sound velocities of high-pressure phases of mantle minerals. In 1976, he moved back to the U. S. to a faculty position in the Department of Earth and Space Sciences [later the Department of Geosciences] at Stony Brook University. Over the ensuing 38 years, he developed an experimental mineral physics program with the close cooperation of Donald Weidner and Charles Prewitt [and later John Parise]. Highlights of this research program were the establishment of the first modern multi-anvil, high-pressure laboratory in 1985, which formed the backbone of the Mineral Physics Institute. The MPI later combined with Princeton University [Alexandra Navrotsky] and the Geophysical Laboratory [Prewitt] to form the NSF Science and Technology Center for High Pressure Research [CHiPR: 1991-2002]. In 2002, CHiPR evolved into the COnsortium for Materials Properties Research in Earth Sciences [COMPRES], for which Bob served as President from 2003 to 2010, before returning to full-time faculty duties. He and his family enjoyed two year-long sabbatical leaves during his years at Stony Brook: 1983-84 in Orsay and Paris, France [with Olivier Jaoul and Jean-Paul Poirier] and in Tokyo, Japan [with Syuniti Akimoto and Takehiko Yagi]; 2002-03 in Toulouse, France with Olivier Jaoul] In addition to his research activi-ties, he served in administrative capacities as Deputy Director of the MPI [1987-1996], Co-Director of CHiPR [1987-2002], Chair of the Department of Geosciences [1997-2000] and Dean of the College of Arts & Sciences [2000-2002] at Stony Brook. He formally retired in May 2014, but continues to be active in research and graduate advising as a Research Professor in the Mineral Physics Institute. In collaboration with Lars Ehm of Stony Brook and Gabriel Gwanmesia of Delaware State University, Bob initiated a new diversity program at Stony Brook entitled: “A Career Path for African-American Students from Historically Black Colleges and Universities to National Laboratories.”

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Programme 23

Plenary Lecture • Robert C. Liebermann

Recent Advances in Measurements of Sound Velocities in Minerals by UltrasonicInterferometry at High Pressures and Temperatures using SynchrotronX-radiation Robert C. Liebermann*1,2, Xuebing Wang1, Ting Chen1, Xintong Qi1, Baosheng Li1,2

1Department of Geosciences, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY, USA 2Mineral Physics Institute, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY, USA

This paper reviews the progress of the technology of ultrasonic interferometry from the early 1950s to the present daya. During this period of more than 60 years, sound wave velocity measurements have been increased from pressures less than 1 GPa and temperatures less than 350K to conditions above 25 GPa and temperatures of 1800K. This technique is complimentary to other direct methods to measure sound veloci-ties (such as Brillouin and impulsive stimulated scattering) as well as indirect methods (e.g., resonance ultrasound spectroscopy, static or shock compression, inelastic X-ray scattering). Newly developed pressure calibration methods and data analysis proce-dures using a finite strain approach are described and applied to major mantle miner-als for the implication for the composition of the Earth’s mantle. The state-of-the-art ultrasonic experiments performed in conjunction with synchrotron X-radiation can achieve simultaneous measurements of the elastic bulk and shear moduli and their pressure and temperature derivatives with direct determination of pressure. A new in-situ pressure gauge has been developed using the acoustic travel times of polycrys-talline Al2O3 calibrated against Decker NaCl scaleb. Recent examples of such studies are presented for a synthetic KLB-1 peridotitec and polycrystalline SiO2-coesited and the current status and outlook/challenges for future experiments are summarized.

References[1] [email protected] Keywords: Ultrasonic interferometry; Elasticity; Multi-anvil; Synchrotron radiation[2] Li, B., and R. C., Liebermann, Study of the Earth’s interior using measurements of sound velocities in minerals by ultrasonic interferometry, Phys. Earth Planet. Interiors, 233, 135-153. 2014.[3] Wang, X., T. Chen, X. Qi, Y. Zou, J. Kung, T. Yu, Y. Wang, R. C. Liebermann and B. Li, Acoustic travel time gauges for in-situ determination of pressure and temperature in multi-anvil apparatus, J. Appl., 118, 065901, 9pp, 2015.[4] Wang, X., T. Chen, Y. Zou, R. C. Liebermann and B. Li, Elastic wave velocities of peridotite KLB-1 at mantle pressures and implications for mantle velocity modeling, Geophys. Res. Lett., 41, doi:10.1002/, 2015GL063436, 2015

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24 Programme

Plenary Lecture • Ross J. Angel

Department of Geosciences, University of Padova, Via G. Gradenigo 6, Padova/IT

Tuesday, 6 September 2016, 09.00, Great Hall K9

Biographical sketchRoss J. Angel received his PhD from the University of Cambridge, and held post- doc-toral fellowships at the Geophysical Lab (Washington DC) and University College Lon-don, before becoming a staff member at the Bayerisches Geoinstitut. He moved in 2001 to Virginia Tech, USA, to become founding director of the university’s crystal-lography laboratory. Since 2011 he has held several visiting professorships in Ger-many, Austria and Italy, and is currently a research scientist at the University of Pa-dova, Italy. The focus of his research for the past 30 years has been to determine the structure-property relationships of key industrial and geological materials through high-pressure experiments, to provide the basis for rationale materials design and for understanding geological processes. He has developed and established novel meth-ods for single-crystal X-ray diffraction at extreme conditions in order to characterize and understand the fundamental relationship between the atomic-scale structures and properties of materials. The software packages that he has developed for diffrac-tometer control and processing of high-pressure data are distributed freely from the web site, www.rossangel.net.

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Programme 25

Plenary Lecture • Ross J. Angel

New Trends and Recent Achievements in High Pressure CrystallographyRoss J. AngelDepartment of Geosciences, University of Padova, Via G. Gradenigo 6, Padova/IT

Equations of state that define the elastic relationship between the volume (or density) of a material to the applied pressure and temperature are an essential basis for high-pressure research. They determine the volume contribution to the free energy of a material, through the PV term, and thus are essential for the definition of equilibrium phase diagrams. The past decade has seen impressive improvements in the precision and accuracy in the determination of equations of state by both diffraction and spectro-scopic methods at high pressures, and simultaneous high pressures and temperatures. However, because equations of state are isotropic descriptions of the response of an isolated material to isotropic stress they are not the appropriate for describing many of the situations we address in high-pressure research. For example, in engineering and the use of building materials, in the pressing of pharmaceuticals into pills, and in the crust of the Earth, the stresses are very anisotropic. Second, not only is the interaction between different phases in composite materials the key to the bulk properties, but the stress distribution between interacting materials can be used to determine the pressure-temperature history of the material, for example as we have applied to inclu-sions trapped inside natural diamonds. In principle all of these situations require not just the equations of state of the materials, but also the full elastic tensor, to be known.The determination of elastic tensors is much more time-consuming than the deter-mination of bulk moduli by high-pressure diffraction, and full tensors are therefore often not available. Therefore, a challenge for the future is to find ways to simplify the analysis to include the essential elastic properties of the systems, and thus provide practical tools for the analysis of the elastic behaviour of materials under extremes of pressure and temperature.

My research into the elastic properties of materials is currently supported by ERC start-ing grant 307322 to Fabrizio Nestola (Padova) and by the MIUR-SIR grant “MILE DEEp” (RBSI140351) to M. Alvaro (Pavia).

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26 Programme

Plenary Lecture • Moshe Paz-Pasternak

The High-Pressure Group, School of Physics and Astronomy Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv/IL

Wednesday, 7 September 2016, 09.00, Great Hall K9

Biographical sketchEducationB.Sc. in Physics, Technion, 1960M.Sc. in Physics, Technion, 1963Ph.D. in Physics, Feinberg Graduate School, Weizmann Institute, 1967

Academic AppointmentsProfessor Emeritus Physics, 2008-PresentPost-doc University of Illinois, Urbana, 1968-1970Senior Lecturer 1970, Associate Prof. 1976, Full Prof. 1983, Tel Aviv UniversityRutgers, NJ, summers 1974-1980Visiting Professor, Sabbatical, University of California, Santa Barbara, 1976-1977Visiting Professor, Sabbatical, Catholic University Leuven, Belgium, 1982-1983Visiting Scientist, Los Alamos, National Laboratory, NM, 1983-1984Consultant, Los Alamos, National Laboratory, NM, summers, 1984-PresentVisiting Professor, Sabbatical, University of California, Berkeley, 1989-1990Visiting Professor, Osaka University, Spring 1993Visiting Professor, Max Planck Institute, Stuttgart, summers of 1995-1997Israeli Academy of Science, Member of the Synchrotron Committee, 1989-PresentSESAME, Council member, 2000-PresentIsraeli member of the European High Pressure Group (EHPRG), 2014-Present

ResearchPressure-induced first- and second-order structural phase transitions, V(P) equations of state, elastic properties and order-disorder transitions (amorphization); Phase transitions of magnetic insulators (Mott insulators) and the effect of the collapse of d-d correlations (Mott-Hubbard transition) and spin-crossover upon the molar vol-ume and bulk modulus. Phase transitions of energetic materials at high-pressure and high-temperature conditions.

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Programme 27

Plenary Lecture • Moshe Paz-Pasternak

Pressure-induced spin crossover and Mott-Hubburd transitions in ferric oxidesMoshe Paz-PasternakThe High-Pressure Group, School of Physics and Astronomy, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv/IL

Electronic/magnetic transitions and their structural consequences in Fe-based Mott insulators at very high density are the main issue of this talk. It focuses on our previ-ous and ongoing experimental high-pressure studies employing: (i) diamond anvils cell, (ii) synchrotron X-ray diffraction, (iii) 57Fe, MFeO3, CaFe2O4 Mössbauer spectros-copy, (iv) electrical resistance, and (v) X-ray absorption spectroscopy. It is shown that applying pressure to such strongly correlated systems leads to drastic changes; in-cluding, spin crossover, inter-valence charge transfer, insulator-to-metal transition, moment collapse, and volume reduction. These changes may occur simultaneously or sequentially. Any of these may be accompanied by or be evolved from structural phase transition due to change of crystal symmetry. Analyzing this rich variety of phe-nomena, we depict the main scenarios, which such strongly correlated systems may undergo on its way to a correlation breakdown, namely the Mott transition. Recent results for MFeO3 (M = Fe, Ga, Lu, Eu, Pr) and CaFe2O4 ferric oxides and Li-ferrites Mott insulators are presented.

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28 Programme

Plenary Lecture • Hubert Huppertz

Institute for General, Inorganic and Theoretic Chemistry University of Innsbruck, Innsbruck/AT

Thursday, 8 September 2016, 09.00, Great Hall K9

Biographical sketchHubert Huppertz studied chemistry at the University of Bayreuth receiving his doc-torate in the group of Wolfgang Schnick in the field of solid-state syntheses of new nitridosilicates. In 1998, he started his habilitation at the University of Munich (LMU) establishing a high pressure laboratory. In the year 2008, he was appointed as full professor at the University of Innsbruck holding the chair for inorganic and general chemistry. His research interests cover exploratory solid-state chemistry under ambi-ent and high-pressure conditions.

Modern High Pressure ChemistryHubert HuppertzInstitute for General, Inorganic and Theoretic Chemistry, University of Innsbruck, Innsbruck/AT

The discovery of new polymorphs of known chemical compounds is an important field in solid state chemistry mainly investigated via low- and high-temperature investiga-tions under ambient pressure conditions. Taking into account the additional parameter pressure, this field of research can be extended by giving access to a variety of high-pressure polymorphs of elements or compounds. Further enhancement is realized by the syntheses of a variety of new metastable solid state compounds with compo-sitions, which are exclusively accessible under high-pressure conditions. Therefore, this synthetic way is one of the most promising approaches for the discovery of new materials. The developments of the last decade impressively show that high-pressure solid state chemistry enjoys an increasing popularity due to the fact that more and more laboratories possess the experimental possibilities to perform syntheses under such extreme conditions.This presentation will give some insights in a multitude of new synthetic achievements in solid state chemistry, which were performed under high-pressure conditions.

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Programme 29

Plenary Lecture • Renata M. M. Wentzcovitch

Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN/US

Friday, 9 September 2016, 09.00, Great Hall K9

Biographical sketchRenata M. M. Wentzcovitch is a Professor of Materials Science and Engineering in the Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science at the University of Minne-sota. She is a member of the graduate faculties in the School of Physics and Astronomy, Department of Earth Sciences, Chemical Physics Program, and Scientific Computation Program, where she is Director of Graduate Studies. Originally from Brazil, she holds a PhD in Condensed Matter Physics from UC-Berkeley. She has been a regular visiting professor at the International School for Advanced Studies (SISSA), Trieste (IT) since 1998, and at Tokyo Institute of Technology since 2002. Over the past two decades her research has been focused primarily on Earth and planetary materials with special emphasis on acoustic/seismic properties of minerals including those containing iron and undergoing spin state crossovers. She is a fellow of APS, AGU, MSA, AAAS, and American Academy of Arts and Sciences. She has received the Senior US Scientist Award of Humboldt Foundation and the 2016 Wilhelm Heraeus visiting professorship from University of Frankfurt.

New Trends and Recent Achievements in Theoretical High Pressure ResearchRenata M. M. WentzcovitchDepartment of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN/US

Practical computational methods to addressing the electronic structure of strongly correlated materials have contributed discoveries and new views to mineral physics, condensed matter, and materials science. In this talk I will discuss recent ab initio high pressure studies of transition metal oxides. Mineral physics applications are making an impact in geophysics, controlled pressure calculations in correlated perovskite oxides are offering fresh insights on fundamental aspects of complex phenomena in these materials, while calculations involving non-hydrostatic stresses are leading to the pre-diction and design of novel properties in these materials.

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30 Programme

EHPRG Award Lecture 2016 • Marius Millot

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, CA/US

Wednesday, 7 September 2016, 12:00, Great Hall K9

Recreating planetary interiors in the laboratory with advanced dynamic compression

Deep inside planets, extreme density, pressure and temperature strongly modify the properties of the constituent materials. In conjunction with numerical simulations, experimental constraints on phase transformations and how they affect thermody-namic and transport properties at interior conditions are crucial to determine a planet’s internal structure and evolution.

Laser-driven dynamic compression can easily reach the multi-megabar range typical of the pressure existing deep inside large planets and exoplanets, but large entropy creation during single-shock compression results in large shock-heating which limits the range of pressure achievable while keeping the temperature below 5000-10000 K. The versatility of large lasers can now be exploited to design advanced shock compres-sion schemes that allow us to probe thermodynamic states other than the pressure/temperature conditions obtained in a single-shock experiment (Hugoniot), therefore opening to the possibility of tackling fundamental questions on the behavior of plan-etary relevant materials at extreme conditions.

Coupling static compression and shocks gives access to well-defined thermodynami-cal states at higher density than along the principal Hugoniot that can be probed with ultrafast optical diagnostics to reveal structural phase transitions and changes in the optical properties. I will discuss recent experimental results on the melting line of silica, the optical properties of superionic water and the metalization of deuterium near the predicted Plasma-Phase-Transition (PPT) to illustrate the benefits of coupling static and dynamic compression.

An alternative way to reproduce planetary interior conditions in the laboratory is to precisely tune the temporal shape of the compression laser pulses to launch series of shocks of increasing amplitude into a thin layer of sample placed between two anvils made of stiffer material such as copper, lithium fluoride or diamond. I will describe how the resulting compression by a series of shock wave reverberations was used at the National Ignition Facility to study deuterium optical properties near the PPT, and at the Omega Laser Facility to unravel signatures of a new phase of superionic water ice.Prepared by LLNL under Contract DE-AC52-07NA27344. LLNL-CONF-694318

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Programme 31

EHPRG Award Lecture 2016 • Sylvain Petitgirard

Bavarian Research Institute of Experimental Geochemistry and Geophysics (BGI), University of Bayreuth, Bayreuth/DE

Wednesday, 7 September 2016, 12.30, Great Hall K9

Density of silicate glasses and melts to extreme conditions of pressure

Measuring the density of non-crystalline matter, such as glasses and liquids to ex-treme conditions of pressures remains challenging, especially when the samples are composed of Low-Z elements. The weak interaction with X-rays as well as the poor diffuse scattering form such disordered structures prohibit the use of classical tech-nique such as diffraction and require a dedicated experimental set-up. To alleviate the lack of data on low scattering non-crystalline silicates, we have adapted the X-ray absorption technique to the small sample environment of the Diamond Anvil Cell. The method enables us to measure density of glasses, liquids and potentially melts to unprecedented pressures. At beamline ID13 (ESRF, France) we measured the density of MgSiO3 and SiO2 glasses, up to core-mantle boundary pressure (130 GPa) and 90 GPa respectively. We discovered that MgSiO3 and SiO2 glasses (300 K) are as dense, within the uncertain-ties, as their crystalline counterpart phases at the pressure of the lowermost mantle above the core-mantle boundary. Our experimentally determined densities for Mg-SiO3 glass are much higher than those measured previously using Brillouin spectros-copy but agree with densities calculated with ab initio molecular dynamic simulations. Taking into account that iron will partition preferentially into the melt phase, we con-clude that melting in the MgSiO3-FeSiO3 system will produce magmas that are denser than the residual solids, regardless of the exact nature of iron partitioning. The iron-rich silicate melts will likely accumulate on top of the core, enabling the formation of a deep basal magma ocean concomitant with the late accretion stage of the Earth.

(For credits to all contributors to this work and references, please see the full abstract in the abstract file supplied on an USB in the conference bags on-site.)

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32 Programme

Programme Overview • Chairs-Speakers

Great Hall K9 Room K3 Great Hall K9 Room K5 Room K6 Room K7

08.45–09.00

Opening Ceremony

09.00–10.00

P. Loubeyre

10.20–12.20 10.20–12.20 10.20–12.20 10.20–12.20

MS 15A MS 5A MS 8A MS 14A

V. B. Prakapenka D. P. Kozlenko S. Klotz J. M. A. Saraiva

F. Meersmann

C. Prescher C. Tulk E. Greenberg C. Rauh

T. S. Duffy M. Guthrie V. Cerantola N. Brooks

F. Beijina E. Lukin F. Maeda R. Hazael

T. Irifune T. Hattori D. Vasiukov J. M. A. Saraiva

A. Serovaiskii J. A. Rodriguez-Velamazan C. Weis

14.00–16.00 14.00–16.00 14.00–16.00 14.00–16.00

MS 15B MS 5B MS 8B MS 9A

T. Irifune D. P. Kozlenko F. Rodriguez Gonzalez A. I. Chumakov

16.00–18.00 M. Guthrie

A. Goncharov S. Klotz I. A. Abrikosov C. Weigel

Y. Litvin R. Boehler A. Friedrich B. Haberl

A. Hermann C. Bull J. Rouquette J. Zaug

S. Rashchenko J. Qian J. Ebad-Allah R. Boehler

F. Alabarse F. Wilhelm E. Uykur S. Starzonek

E. Mukhina C. Ridley V. Degtyareva

16.20–19.00 16.20–19.00 16.20–19.00 16.20–19.00

MS 15C MS 7 MS 14B MS 9B

T. Yagi M. Paz-Pasternak E. Boldyreva C. Weigel

V. Stuzhkin A. I. Chumakov A. Katrusiak V. V. Brazhkin

Y. Wang I. Kupenko F. P. A. Fabbiani C. Pruteanu

Z. Liu R. S. Manna I. Rietveld N. Zagrtdenov

B. Joseph E. Pugh N. Schrodt G. Serghiou

R. Caracas H. Wilhelm I. Hernandez G. W. Lee

A. Sano-Furukawa B. Lebert B. Zakharov

E. Kulik S. Konar

D. Zimmer

EHPRG Commitee Meeting

Sunday, 4 September 2016 Monday, 5 September 2016

Plenary LectureRobert C. Liebermann

Welcome Receptionin the industrial exhibition

18.00–21.00

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Programme 33

Programme Overview • Chairs-Speakers

Great Hall K9 Room K5 Room K6 Room K7 Great Hall K9 Room K5 Room K6 Room K7

09.00–10.00 09.00–10.00

W. B. Holzapfel K. Syassen

10.20–12.20 10.20–12.20 10.20–12.20 10.20–12.20 10.20–11.40 10.20–11.40 10.20–11.40 10.20–11.40

MS 1A MS 18A MS 11A MS 12A MS 16 MS 2 MS 3A MS 18C

A. Friedrich A. F. Goncharov H. Huppertz M. Abd-Elmeguid P. Loubeyre V. Dmitriev K. Kamenev M. I. McMahon

E. Bykova R. S. McWilliams U. Häussermann D. Khomskii T. Yagi M. Bykov S. Friedemann R. Redmer

C. Langrand S. Sinogeikin D. Laniel G. Hearne A. Dewaele I. Loa E. Stavrou M. Millot

S. Merkel S. Pascarelli A. Dewaele D. P. Kozlenko L. Dubrovinsky I. Collings J. Zaug P. M. Celliers

A. Palhomova R. Torchio H. Gou H. Takahashi 11.45–13.30

J. S. Loveday G. Aprillis N. A. Gaida S. Klotz General Assembly

M. Millot

S. Petitgitard

A. Katrusiak

14.00–16.00

16.20–19.00 16.20–19.00 16.20–19.00 16.20–19.00

MS 1B MS 18B MS 17 MS 12B

J. S. Loveday T. S. Duffy R. Boehler K. Syassen

W. B. Holzapfel R. G. Kraus M. Mezouar J. S. Schilling

E. Stavrou R. Briggs G. Aquilanti G. Wortmann

V. Svitlyk F. Coppari G. Morard M. Vališka

I. Kruglov W. Nellis S. Boccato A. Huxley

O. Barkalov J. Wicks G. Weck M. Grosche

B. Kulnitskiy M. Gorman K. Fuchizaki F. Rodríguez-GonzalezJ. Gonzalez J. Zaug J.-A. Queyroux

14.00–16.00 14.00–18.45

Plenary LectureRoss John Angel

Plenary LectureMoshe Paz-Pasternak

Tuesday, 6 September 2016 Wednesday, 7 September 2016

12.20–12.40

Discussion Session High-pressure neutrons in the next decadeM. GuthrieJ. S. Loveday Poster Session 1 in Room K1+2

Topics 1, 7, 9, 12, 15, 17

Conference Excursions

HP Community Photo

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34 Programme

Programme Overview • Chairs-Speakers

Great Hall K9 Room K5 Room K6 Room K7 Great Hall K9 Room K5 Room K6 Room 7

09.00–10.00 09.00–10.00

K. Friese S. K. Saxena

10.20–12.20 10.20–12.20 10.20–12.20 10.20–12.20 10.20–12.20 10.20–12.20 10.20–12.20 10.20–12.20

MS 6A MS 4A MS 3B MS 1C MS 20 MS 19B MS 4B MS 10B

G. Rozenberg Z. Konopkova S. Sinogeikin M. Bykov A. Dewaele S. Frost S. Pascarelli L. V. Pourovski

M. Eremets K. Appel M. Kepa J. Proctor Y. Filinchuck R. Caracas F. Gorelli C. Pierleoni

G. Garbarino M. Hanfland A. Machikhin V. Monteseguro-Padrón S. Besedin I. Efthimiopoulos Y. Wang I. Leonov

S. Layek V. Prakapenka T. Meier D. Mast P. Loubeyre R. Abe M. Stekiel T. Ishikawa

S. Medvedev B. Joseph M. Schwarz C. Neun C. Zha J.-A. Queyroux P. Jorba A. Mafety

S. Buga G. Garbarino E. Yahel I. Chuvashova T. Schlothauer R. Smith O. Matthies

C. Woodall 12.20–12.40

Closing Ceremony

16.20–18.20 16.20–18.20 16.20–18.20 16:20-18:20

MS 6B MS 19A MS 11B MS 10A

G. Garbarino B. Winkler Y. Wang I. A. Abrikosov

M. J. Coak M. Merlini S. Merkel W. B. Holzapfel

Z. Konopkova S. Chariton J. Jeanneau L. Pourovskii

A. Kusmartseva C.-J. Fruhner M. Isobe K. Aoki

C. R. S. Haines J. Müller I. Yamadad P. Teeratchanan

I. S. Lyubutin M. Stekiel M. Schmitt O. Pagès

A. Bergara D. Cebulla

14.00–16.00

Friday, 9 September 2016

Plenary LectureHubert Huppertz

Plenary LectureRenata M. M. Wentzcovitch

Thursday, 8 September 2016

Poster Session 2 in Room K1+2 Topics 3, 4, 6, 10, 11, 14, 15, 18, 19

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36 Programme

Programme Overview • Monday, 5 September 2016

Chairs Time Room Speaker

PL 1 Recent Advances in Measurements of Sound Velocities in Minerals by Ultrasonic Interferometry at High Pressures and Temperatures using Synchrotron X-radiation

Paul Loubeyre(Bruyères-le-Châtel/FR)

09.00–10.00 Great Hall K9 Robert Liebermann(Stony Brook, NY/US)

Chairs Time Room Invited Speakers

5A Denis P. Kozlenko (Dubna/RU)

10.20–12.20 Room K5 Chris Tulk(Oak Ridge, TN/US)

5B Denis P. Kozlenko(Dubna/RU)Malcolm Guthrie(Lund/SE)

14.00–16.00 Room K5

7 Magnetism at extreme conditions Moshe Paz-Pasternak(Tel Aviv/IL)

16.20–19.00 Room K5 Aleksandr I. Chumakov (Grenoble/FR)

8A Stefan Klotz(Paris/FR)

10.20–12.20 Room K6 Eran Greenberg(Argonne, IL/US)

8B Fernando Rodríguez Gonzalez(Santander/ES)

14.00–16.00 Room K6

9A Aleksandr I. Chumakov (Grenoble/FR)

14.00–16.00 Room K7

9B Coralie Weigel(Montpellier /FR)

16.20–19.00 Room K7 Vadim V. Brazhkin(Troitsk, Moscow/RU)

14B Elena Boldyreva (Novosibirsk/RU)

16.20–19.00 Room K6 Andrzej Katrusiak(Poznań/PL)

14A Jorge M. A. Saraiva(Aveiro/PT)Filip Meersman(London/GB)

10.20–12.20 Room K7 Cornelia Rauh(Berlin/DE)Nick Brooks(London/GB)

15A Vitali B. Prakapenka(Argonne, IL/US)

10.20–12.20 Great Hall K9 Clemens Prescher (Cologne/DE)

15B Tetsuo Irifune (Matsuyama/JP)

14.00–16.00 Great Hall K9

15C Takehiko Yagi(Tokyo/JP)

16.20–19.00 Great Hall K9

Time Room Speaker

08.45–09.00 Great Hall K9 Leonid DubrovinskyNatalia Dubrovinskaia(Bayreuth/DE)Konstantin Kamenev(Edinburgh/GB)

Opening Ceremony

Micro Symposia

Plenary Talk

Novel high-pressure instrumentation at large-scale facilities: neutrons

Electronic transitions at high degree of compression

Non-crystalline state at high pressure

High pressure bio-, life and food sciences/ Pharmaceutical and organic compounds

High pressure mineral physics and geochemistry

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Programme 37

Scientific Programme • Monday, 5 September 2016

08.45–09.00 Opening CeremonyRoom Great Hall K9

09.00–10.00 PL1 – Plenary Lecture 1Room Great Hall K9Chair Paul Loubeyre (Bruyères-le-Châtel/FR)

09.00 Recent Advances in Measurements of Sound Velocities in Minerals by Ultrasonic Interferometry at High Pressures and Temperatures using Synchrotron X-radiation Robert C. Liebermann (Stony Brook, NY/US)

10.00–10.20 Coffee Break in the industrial exhibition

10.20–12.20 MS 15A – High pressure mineral physics and geochemistryRoom Great Hall K9Chair Vitali B. Prakapenka (Argonne, IL/US)

10.20 Structure of silicate glasses up to 172 GPa Clemens Prescher (Cologne/DE; Chicago, IL/US)

11.00 Crystal structure of MgO along the shock HugoniotO 15.1 Thomas S. Duffy, June K. Wicks (Princeton, NJ/US) Raymond F. Smith, Richard G. Kraus (Livermore, CA/US) Federica Coppari (Livermore, CA/US) Matthew Newman (Pasadena, CA/US) Jon H. Eggert (Livermore, CA/US)

11.20 Deformation of polyphase aggregates, forsterite+MgO, at high O 15.2 pressures and temperatures Frederic Bejina, Misha Bystricky (Toulouse/FR) Jannick Ingrin (Villeneuve d’Ascq/FR), Liping Wang (Las Vegas, NV/US)

11.40 Ultrahigh-pressure synthesis and characterization of transparent O 15.12 nano-polycrystalline silicate garnet Tetsuo Irifune, Koji Kawakami, Takeshi Arimoto, Hiroaki Ohfuji Takehiro Kunimoto, Toru Shinmei (Matsuyama/JP)

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Scientific Programme • Monday, 5 September 2016

12.00 Iron carbide and iron hydride from hydrocarbons during slab suductionO 15.4 Aleksandr Serovaiskii (Moscow/RU; Stockholm/SE) Elena Mukhina (Stockholm/SE; Moscow/RU) Anton Kolesnikov (Moscow/RU), Leonid Dubrovinsky (Bayreuth/DE) Vladimir Kutcherov (Moscow/RU; Stockholm/SE)

10.20–12.20 MS 5A – Novel high-pressure instrumentation at large-scale facilities: neutronsRoom K5Chair Denis P. Kozlenko (Dubna/RU)

10.20 High Pressure Neutron Scattering at Oak Ridge National Laboratory Chris Tulk (Oak Ridge, TN/US)

11.00 High pressure science at the European spallation sourceO 5.1 Malcolm Guthrie, Arno Hiess (Lund/SE) Werner Schweika (Jülich/DE; Lund/SE) Reinhard Boehler (Washington D.C./US) Jamie Molaison, Antonio Moreira dos Santos, Chris Tulk Bianca Haberl (Oak Ridge, TN/US), Craig Bull (Didcot/GB) Nicholas Funnell (Didcot/GB), John S. Loveday, Konstantin Kamenev Mary-Ellen Donnelly, Ciprian Pruteanu (Edinburgh/GB) Stefan Klotz (Paris/FR)

11.20 High-pressure neutron diffraction under extreme conditions at the O 5.2 IBR-2 reactor: recent developments Evgeniy Lukin, Denis P. Kozlenko, Sergey Kichanov Boris Savenko (Dubna/RU)

11.40 High-pressure neutron beamline PLANET at pulsed neutron source atO 5.3 J-PARC Takanori Hattori (Ibaraki/JP), Asami Sano-Furukawa (Tokai/JP) Hiroshi Arima (Sendai/JP), Kazuki Komatsu (Tokyo/JP) Ken-ichi Funakoshi (Tokai/JP), Jun Abe, Shin-ichi Machida Kei-ichi Ouchi, Nobuo Okazaki (Ibaraki/JP)

12.00 The new extreme conditions neutron diffractometer at ILL: XtremeDO 5.4 J. Alberto Rodriguez-Velamazan (Zaragoza/ES) Giuliana Manzin (Grenoble/FR), Javier Campo (Zaragoza/ES)

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Programme 39

Scientific Programme • Monday, 5 September 2016

10.20–12.20 MS 8A – Electronic transitions at high degree of compressionRoom K6Chair Stefan Klotz (Paris/FR) 10.20 Pressure-induced multi-stage electronic transitions in Fe³+ oxides Eran Greenberg (Argonne, IL/US) 11.00 Local structure and spin transition in Fe2O3 hematite at high pressureO 8.1 Andrea Sanson (Padova/IT) Innokenty Kantor (Grenoble/FR; Kongens Lyngby/DK) Valerio Cerantola ((Bayreuth/DE; Grenoble/FR) Tetsuo Irifune (Matsuyama/JP), Alberto Carnera (Padova/IT) Sakura Pascarelli (Grenoble/FR) 11.20 Pressure-induced electronic change of iron in complicated silicate O 8.2 glasses Fumiya Maeda, Seiji Kamada (Sendai/JP) Eiji Ohtani (Sendai, Miyagi/JP; Novosibirsk/RU) Tatsuya Sakamaki (Sendai/JP), Naohisa Hirao, Takaya Mitsui (Sayo/JP) Ryo Masuda (Osaka/JP), Satoshi Nakano (Tsukuba/JP)

11.40 Pressure-induced spin pairing transition in trivalent iron octahedrally O 8.3 coordinated by oxygen Denis Vasiukov, Elena Bykova (Bayreuth/DE) Ilya Kupenko (Grenoble/FR; Münster, Bayreuth/DE) Leyla Ismailova (Bayreuth/DE) Valerio Cerantola (Bayreuth/DE; Grenoble/FR), Georgios Aprilis Catherine McCammon (Bayreuth/DE) Aleksandr I. Chumakov (Grenoble/FR) Eran Greenberg (Argonne, IL/US) Clemens Prescher (Cologne/DE; Chicago, IL/US) Vitali B. Prakapenka (Argonne, IL/US), Leonid Dubrovinsky Natalia Dubrovinskaia (Bayreuth/DE)

12.00 Pressure-induced spin transition of Fe2+ in magnesio-siderite solidO 8.4 solution and siderite studied by x-ray Raman scattering Christopher Weis, Christian Sternemann (Dortmund/DE) Valerio Cerantola (Bayreuth/DE; Grenoble/FR) Christoph J. Sahle (Grenoble/FR), Yury Forov (Dortmund/DE) Georg Spiekermann (Potsdam, Hamburg/DE) Hendrik Rahmann (Dortmund/DE), Max Wilke (Potsdam/DE) Metin Tolan (Dortmund/DE)

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40 Programme

Scientific Programme • Monday, 5 September 2016

10.20–12.20 MS 14A – High pressure bio-, life and food sciences/Pharmaceutical and organic compoundsRoom K7Chairs Jorge M. A. Saraiva (Aveiro/PT), Filip Meersmann (London/GB)

10.20 Process induced relaminarization during high pressure processing Cornelia Rauh (Berlin/DE) 11.00 Triggering dynamic structural changes in lipid membranes Nick Brooks (London/GB)

11.40 Bacterial survival following shock compression in the GigaPascal rangeO 14.1 Rachael Hazael (London/GB), Brianna Fitzmaurice (Swindon/GB) Fabrizia Foglia (London/GB), Gareth Appleby-Thomas (Swindon/GB) Paul F. McMillan (London/GB)

12.00 Process stability of Listeriophage P100 towards high pressure processingO 14.2 Norton Komora (Porto/PT), Sónia M. Castro (Aveiro, Porto/PT) Carolina Bruschi, Vânia Ferreira, Paula Teixeira (Porto/PT) Jorge M. A. Saraiva (Aveiro/PT)

12.20–14.00 Lunch Break in the industrial exhibition and in the restaurant

14.00–16.00 MS 15B – High pressure mineral physics and geochemistryRoom Great Hall K9Chair Tetsuo Irifune (Matsuyama/JP) 14.00 Novel stable Xe compounds of Fe and Ni at the pressure-temperatureO 15.5 conditions of the Earth’s core Alexander F. Goncharov (Washington D.C./US) Elissaios Stavrou (Livermore, CA/US) Sergey Lobanov (Washington D.C./US), Joseph M. Zaug Zurong Dai (Livermore, CA/US), Yansun Yao (Saskatoon, SK/CA) Hanye Liu (Washington D.C./US) Vitali B. Prakapenka (Argonne, IL/US) 14.20 Origin of lower-mantle diamonds and associated mineralsO 15.6 Yuriy Litvin, Anna Spivak (Chernogolovka/RU) Leonid Dubrovinsky (Bayreuth/DE)

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Programme 41

Scientific Programme • Monday, 5 September 2016

14.40 Phase transitions in Group-I and –II hydroxides under pressure:O 15.7 predictions and confirmations Andreas Hermann, Pattanasak Teeratchanan Ciprian Pruteanu (Edinburgh/GB) Mainak Mookherjee (Tallahassee, FL/US) Malcolm Guthrie (Lund/SE), Richard Nelmes John S. Loveday (Edinburgh/GB), Neil Ashcroft Roald Hoffmann (Ithaca, NY/US)

15.00 Synthesis of high-pressure MgSi(OH)6 hydroxide perovskite viaO 15.8 decomposition of ‘10Å phase’ Sergey Rashchenko (Novosibirsk/RU), Seiji Kamada (Sendai/JP) Eiji Ohtani (Sendai, Miyagi/JP; Novosibirsk/RU)

15.20 Nanoconfined water in porous zeolites under extreme conditionsO 15.9 Frederico Alabarse (Paris/FR), Benoît Coasne Julien Haines (Montpellier/FR), Stefan Klotz, Livia Bove (Paris/FR)

15.40 Solid product of hydrocarbon formation from inorganic mineralsO 15.10 Elena Mukhina (Stockholm/SE; Moscow/RU) Anton Kolesnikov (Moscow/RU), Leonid Dubrovinsky (Bayreuth/DE) Vladimir Kutcherov (Moscow/RU; Stockholm/SE)

14.00–16.00 MS 5B – Novel high-pressure instrumentation at large-scale facilities: neutronsRoom K5Chairs Denis P. Kozlenko (Dubna/RU), Malcolm Guthrie (Lund/SE) 14.00 High pressure neutron diffraction to beyond 20 GPa and below 1.8 KO 5.5 using Paris-Edinburgh load frames Stefan Klotz (Paris/FR), Thierry Strässle (Paris/FR; Villigen/CH) Blair Lebert (Paris, Gif-sur-Yvette/FR), Matteo d’Astuto (Paris/FR) Thomas Hansen (Grenoble/FR) 14.20 Neutron inelastic scattering with large volume diamond cellsO 5.6 Reinhard Boehler (Washington D.C./US)

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Scientific Programme • Monday, 5 September 2016

14.40 Neutron total scattering of crystalline materials in the gigapascalO 5.7 regime Craig Bull, Helen Playford, Matthew Tucker (Didcot/GB)

15.00 Diamond-silicon carbide and polycrystalline cubic boron nitride O 5.8 (PcBN) anvils for high pressure neutron diffraction Jiang Qian, Kenneth Bertagnolli (Orem, UT/US), Shanmin Wang Luke L. Daemen (Oak Ridge, TN/US)

15.20 Investigation of the magnetism of UGe2 under high pressure with XMCDO 5.9 Fabrice Wilhelm, Daniel Braithwaite (Grenoble/FR) Dai Aoki (Grenoble/FR; Ibaraki/JP), Jean-Pierre Sanchez Jean-Pascal Brison, Francois Guillou, Andrei Rogalev (Grenoble/FR)

15.40 3D laser sintered collimation for neutron diffraction from micro O 5.10 powder samples Christopher Ridley, Konstantin Kamenev (Edinburgh/GB) Oleg Kirichek, Pascal Manuel, Dmitry Khalyavin (Oxford/GB)

14.00–16.00 MS 8B – Electronic transitions at high degree of compressionRoom K6Chair Fernando Rodríguez Gonzalez (Santander/ES)

14.00 Theoretical description of pressure induced electronic transitions: O 8.5 IMT, ETT, CLC Igor A. Abrikosov (Moscow/RU; Linköping/SE), Marcus Ekholm Qingguo Feng (Linköping/SE) Leonid V. Pourovskii (Linköping/SE; Palaiseau/FR) Mikhail I. Katsnelson (Nijmegen/NL) John M. Wills (Los Alamos, NM/US) Alexey A. Tal (Moscow/RU; Linköping/SE), Natalia Dubrovinskaia Leonid Dubrovinsky (Bayreuth/DE)

14.20 Pressure-induced spin transitions in garnets at 45-70 GPaO 8.6 Alexandra Friedrich (Vienna/AT; Würzburg, Frankfurt a. M./DE) Monika Koch-Müller (Potsdam/DE) Wolfgang Morgenroth (Frankfurt a. M./DE)

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Programme 43

Scientific Programme • Monday, 5 September 2016

14.40 Interplay between H-bonding and charge ordering in Fe3(PO4)2(OH)2O 8.7 barbosalite at high pressure Jerome Rouquette (Montpellier/FR)

15.00 Signatures for the pressure-induced phase transition in the iridatesO 8.8 A2IrO3 (A = Na, Li) investigated by infrared spectroscopy Jihaan Ebad-Allah (Tanta/EG; Augsburg/DE), Volker Hermann Friedrich Freund, Philipp Gegenwart Christine Kuntscher (Augsburg/DE)

15.20 Pressure-induced superconductivity in iron pnictide superconductorO 8.9 BaFe2(As1-xPx)2 Ece Uykur (Augsburg/DE), Tatsuya Kobayashi, Wataru Hirata Shigeki Miyasaka, Setsuko Tajima (Osaka/JP) Christine Kuntscher (Augsburg/DE)

14.00–16.00 MS 9A – Non-crystalline state at high pressureRoom K7Chair Aleksandr I. Chumakov (Grenoble/FR)

14.00 Polarized Raman spectroscopy of v-SiO2 under rare gas compressionO 9.4 Coralie Weigel, Marie Foret (Montpellier/FR)

14.20 Does amorphous germanium exhibit polyamorphism?O 9.2 Bianca Haberl, Jamie Molaison (Oak Ridge, TN/US) Malcolm Guthrie (Lund/SE), Joerg Neuefeind Luke L. Daemen (Oak Ridge, TN/US), Jim S. Williams (Canberra/AU) Reinhard Boehler (Washington D.C./US) Jodie E. Bradby (Canberra/AU) 14.40 Reporting on the high pressure thermal decomposition of O 9.9 2,4,6-triamino-1,3,5-trinitrobenzene (TATB) Joseph M. Zaug, Elissaios Stavrou Jonathan Crowhurst (Livermore, CA/US) 15.00 Permanent structural changes of glassy carbon after compression inO 9.1 a diamond-anvil-cell Thomas Shiell (Canberra/AU), Dougal McCulloch (Melbourne/AU) Jodie Bradby (Canberra/AU), Bianca Haberl (Oak Ridge, TN/US) Reinhard Boehler (Washington D.C./US) David McKenzie (Sydney/AU)

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Scientific Programme • Monday, 5 September 2016

15.20 Impact of high pressure on glass-forming soft matter nanocomposiatesO 9.5 Szymon Starzonek, Emilia Pawlikowska, Michał Zalewski Sylwester J. Rzoska (Warsaw/PL)

15.40 Electronic origin of melting T-P curves for alkali metals with flat, O 9.6 negative slope and minimum Valentina Degtyareva (Chernogolovka/RU)

16.00–16.20 Coffee Break in the industrial exhibition

16.20–19.00 MS 15C – High pressure mineral physics and geochemistryRoom Great Hall K9Chair Takehiko Yagi (Tokyo/JP) 16.20 Phase diagram of hydrides of iron at pressures up to 200 GPaO 15.11 Viktor Struzkhin (Washington D.C./US), DuckYoung Kim (Shanghai/CN) Zachary Geballe, Jianjun Ying (Washington D.C./US) Tomasz Jaroń (Washington, D.C./US; Warsaw/PL) Alexander Gavriliuk (Moscow, Troitsk/RU) Ivan A. Troyan (Moscow/RU) Clemens Prescher (Cologne/DE; Chicago, IL/US) Vitali B. Prakapenka (Argonne, IL/US)

16.40 Understanding transformational faulting as a deep focus earthquake O 15.3 mechanism: Correlating in-situ acoustic emission locations at high pressure and temperature with post-mortem fault imaging using synchrotron X-Ray microtomography Yanbin Wang, Feng Shi (Argonne, IL/US) Lupei Zhu (Saint Louis, MO/US) Tony Yu (Stony Brook, NY, Argonne, IL/US) Mark Rivers (Argonne, IL/US), Alexandre Schubnel (Paris/FR) Nadège Hilairet (Lille/FR), Fabrice Brunet (Grenoble/FR) 17.00 Phase relations in the system MgSiO3-Al2O3 in the lower mantleO 15.13 Zhaodong Liu (Matsuyama/JP; Bayreuth/DE), Tetsuo Irifune Masayuki Nishi, Yoshinori Tange (Kouto, Matsuyama/JP) Takeshi Arimoto, Toru Shinmei (Matsuyama/JP), Tomoo Katsura Takayuki Ishii, Hongzhan Fei, Lin Lin Wang (Bayreuth/DE)

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Programme 45

Scientific Programme • Monday, 5 September 2016

17.20 Combined Ni K-edge x-ray absorption and Raman spectroscopicO 15.14 Investigation of nickel hydroxide under high pressure Carlo Marini (Cerdanyola del Valles/ES; Grenoble/FR) Boby Joseph (Trieste/IT), Simone Caramazza, Francesco Capitani (Rome/IT) Innokenty Kantor (Grenoble/FR; Kongens Lyngby/DK) Olivier Mathon, Sakura Pascarelli (Grenoble/FR) Paolo Postorino (Rome/IT)

17.40 Pyrolite during and in the aftermath of the giant impactO 15.15 Razvan Caracas (Lyon/FR), Ryuichi Nomura, Kei Hirose (Tokyo/JP) Maxim Ballmer (Zurich/CH)

18.00 Neutron diffraction experiment on δ-AlOOH and investigation of O 15.16 symmetrization of hydrogen bond Asami Sano-Furukawa (Tokai/JP), Takanori Hattori (Ibaraki/JP)

18.20 Thermal expansion of coesite: A synchrotron X-ray diffraction studyO 15.17 from 100 K up to 1000 K Eleonora Kulik (Hamburg, Bayreuth/DE) Norimasa Nishiyama (Hamburg/DE) Shogo Kawaguchi (Hyōgo Prefecture/JP) Vadim Murzin (Hamburg/DE), Tomoo Katsura (Bayreuth/DE)

18.40 Pressure-induced phase transitions in anilite and digeniteO 15.18 Dominik Zimmer, Wolfgang Morgenroth (Frankfurt a. M./DE) Javier Ruiz-Fuertes (València/ES) Lkhamsuren Bayarjargal (Frankfurt a. M./DE) Claus Mühle (Stuttgart/DE), David Santamaría-Pérez (València/ES) Björn Winkler (Frankfurt a. M./DE)

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Scientific Programme • Monday, 5 September 2016

16.20–19.00 MS 7 – Magnetism at extreme conditionsRoom K5Chair Moshe Paz-Pasternak (Tel Aviv/IL)

16.20 New opportunities for studies of magnetism with Synchrotron Mössbauer Source at ESRF Aleksandr I. Chumakov (Grenoble/FR)

17.00 Critical temperatures of iron oxides at high pressuresO 7.1 Ilya Kupenko (Grenoble/FR; Münster, Bayreuth/DE), Georgios Aprilis Denis Vasiukov, Catherine McCammon, Stella Chariton (Bayreuth/DE) Valerio Cerantola (Bayreuth/DE; Grenoble/FR) Innokenty Kantor (Grenoble/FR; Kongens Lyngby/DK) Aleksandr I. Chumakov, Rudolf Rüffer (Grenoble/FR) Leonid Dubrovinsky (Bayreuth/DE) 17.20 Pressure experiments on spin-orbit coupled hyper-honeycombO 7.2 β-Li2IrO3 Rudra Sekhar Manna (Augsburg/DE) 17.40 High pressure structural study through magnetic quantum criticalO 7.3 point Emma Pugh (Kent/GB), Lara Sibley (Cambridge/GB) Noriaki Kimura (Sendai/JP), Sachio Takashima, Masaki Nohara Hidenori Takagi (Stuttgart/DE), Michael Hanfland (Grenoble/FR)

18.00 Exploring the structural, optical, and magnetic properties of Cu2OSeO3O 7.4 Heribert Wilhelm (Didcot/GB), Fengjiao Qian (Harwell/GB; Delft/NL) James Poulten (Harwell, Egham/GB), Dominik Daisenberger (Didcot/GB) Mark Frogley, Gianfelice Cinque (Harwell/GB) Marcus Schmidt (Dresden/DE), Catherine Pappas (Delft/NL) 18.20 Search for magnetism in epsilon iron with neutron diffraction and O 7.5 x-ray emission spectroscopy Blair Lebert (Paris, Gif-sur-Yvette/FR), James Ablett, Francois Baudelet (Gif-sur-Yvette/FR), Michele Casula (Paris/FR) Thomas Hansen (Grenoble/FR), Amelie Juhin, Gilles Le Marchand Pascal Munsch (Paris/FR), Alain Polian (Paris, Gif-sur-Yvette/FR) Thierry Strässle (Paris/FR; Villigen/CH) Zailan Zhang (Paris, Gif-sur-Yvette/FR), Stefan Klotz (Paris/FR) Jean-Pascal Rueff (Gif-sur-Yvette/FR), Matteo d‘Astuto (Paris/FR)

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Programme 47

Scientific Programme • Monday, 5 September 2016

16.20–19.00 MS 14B – High pressure bio-, life and food sciences/Pharmaceutical and organic compoundsRoom K6Chair Elena Boldyreva (Novosibirsk/RU)

16.20 Anomalous compression of crystals Andrzej Katrusiak (Poznań/PL)

17.00 Pressure-responsive organic compounds: Beauty at the lower end ofO 14.3 the high-pressure scale Francesca P. A. Fabbiani, Rubén Granero-García Sofiane Saouane (Göttingen/DE) 17.20 The stability hierarchy of trimorphic piracetam solved through O 14.4 high-pressure analysis Siro Toscani (Rennes/FR), René Céolin (Paris/FR), Maria Barrio Josep-Lluis Tamarit (Barcelona/ES), Ivo Rietveld (Paris/FR)

17.40 5-aminotetrazole monohydrate up to 51 GPa: pressure-inducedO 14.5 phonon softening and phase transitions Nadine Schrodt, Wolfgang Morgenroth, Lkhamsuren Bayarjargal Björn Winkler (Frankfurt a. M./DE) 18.00 High pressure structural properties of functionalized imidazolium saltsO 14.6 Imanol de Pedro, Abel Garcia-Saiz, Jesus Rodriguez (Santander/ES) Oriol Vallcorba (Barcelona/ES), Jordi Rius (Bellaterra/ES) Jairton Dupont, Pedro Migowski (Porto Alegre/BR) Fernando Rodríguez, Jesus Gonzalez, Ignacio Hernandez (Santander/ES)

18.20 Role of pressure transmitting media in structural transformations ofO 14.7 molecular crystals at high pressures Boris Zakharov, Sergey Goryainov, Yurii Seryotkin (Novosibirsk/RU) Nikolay Tumanov (Louvain-la-Neuve/BE) Elena Boldyreva (Novosibirsk/RU)

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Scientific Programme • Monday, 5 September 2016

18.40 Energetic materials under pressureO 14.8 Craig Henderson (Edinburgh/GB) Steve Hunter (Edinburgh/GB; Aberdeen, MD/US), Sumit Konar Carole A. Morrison (Ediburgh/GB), William G. Marshall Annette Kleppe (Didcot/GB), Helen Maynard-Casely (Sydney/AU) Colin R. Pulham (Edinburgh/GB)

16.20–19.00 MS 9B – Non-crystalline state at high pressureRoom K7Chair Coralie Weigel (Montpellier/FR)

16.20 Phase transformations and relaxation in glassy chalcogenides under high pressure Vadim V. Brazhkin (Troitsk, Moscow, Dolgoprudny/RU)

17.00 Water and methane: when models fail to explain newly discovered O 9.8 phenomena Ciprian Pruteanu, Wilson Poon, Davide Marenduzzo John S. Loveday (Edinburgh/GB)

17.20 Mid-ocean ridge basalt – serpentinized mantle interaction producing O 9.12 primary tholeiitic melts is fast-rate Nail Zagrtdenov (Toulouse/FR) Anastassia Borisova (Toulouse/FR; Moscow/RU), Michael Toplis Georges Ceuleneer (Toulouse/FR), Oleg Safonov (Chernogolovka/RU) Svyatoslav Shcheka (Bayreuth/DE), Vladimir Polukeev Dmitrii Varlamov (Chernogolovka/RU), Gleb Pokrovski (Toulouse/FR) Andrew Bychkov (Moscow/RU), Sophie Gouy Philippe de Parseval (Toulouse/FR)

17.40 Phase relations, reactivity and new materials landscapes in alloys,O 9.10 nitrides using extreme conditions, X-ray, precession electron diffraction and electron microscopy George Serghiou, Nicholas Odling (Edinburgh/GB) Hans-Josef Reichmann (Potsdam/DE), Gang Ji (Lille/FR) Chris Jeffree (Ediburgh/GB)

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Programme 49

Scientific Programme • Monday, 5 September 2016

18.00 Pressure-induced liquid-liquid transition in early transition metal Ti O 9.7 with a positive melting slope Geun Woo Lee (Daejeon/KR), Byeongchan Lee (Suwon/KR) Ross Marvin (Suwon/KR; Livermore, CA/US) Daniel Errandonea (Suwon/KR; Livermore, CA/US; Valencia/ES) Reinhard Boehler (Washington D.C./US)

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Programme Overview • Tuesday, 6 September 2016

Chairs Time Room Speaker

PL 2 New Trends and Recent Achievements in High Pressure Crystallography

Wilfried B. Holzapfel (Paderborn/DE)

09.00–10.00 Great Hall K9 Ross J. Angel(Padova/IT)

Chairs Time Room Invited Speakers

18A Alexander F. Goncharov (Washington D.C./US)

10.20–12.20 Room K5 R. Stewart McWilliams(Edinburgh/GB)

18B Thomas S. Duffy(Princeton, NJ/US)

16.20–19.00 Room K5 Richard G. Kraus(Livermore, CA/US)

11A High pressure synthetic chemistry   Hubert Huppertz (Innsbruck/AT)

10.20–12.20 Room K6 Ulrich Häussermann(Stockholm/SE)

17 Melting at high pressures: new methods, new findings, and new controversies?

Reinhard Boehler (Washington D.C./US)

16.20–19.00 Room K6 Mohamed Mezouar (Grenoble/FR)

12A Mohsen Abd‐Elmeguid (Cologne/DE)

10.20–12.20 Room K7 Daniel Khomskii (Cologne/DE)

12B  Karl Syassen(Stuttgart/DE)

16.20–19.00 Room K7 James S. Schilling(St. Louis, MO/US)

1A Alexandra Friedrich (Vienna/AT, Würzburg, Frankfurt a. M./DE)

10.20–12.20 Great Hall K9 Elena Bykova(Bayreuth/DE)

1B John S. Loveday (Edinburgh/GB)

16.20–19.00 Great Hall K9

Time Room Speaker

High‐pressure neutrons in the next decade Malcolm Guthrie(Lund/SE)John S. Loveday (Edinburgh/GB)

14.00–16.00 Great Hall K9

Time Room Speaker

12.20‐12.40 ARVENA Hotel

Time Room Speaker

Poster Session I 14.00–16.00 Room K1+2

HP Community Photo

Poster Session

Discussion Session

Plenary Talk

Micro Symposia

Dynamic compression and time resolved measurements: from meteorites to novel materials 

Novel physical phenomena at high pressures and low temperatures

Structural studies at extreme conditions 

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Programme 51

Scientific Programme • Tuesday, 6 September 2016

09.00–10.00 PL2 – Plenary Lecture 2Room Great Hall K9Chair Wilfried B. Holzapfel (Paderborn/DE) 09.00 New Trends and Recent Achievements in High Pressure Crystallography Ross J. Angel (Padova/IT)

10.00–10.20 Coffee Break in the industrial exhibition 10.20–12.20 MS 1A – Structural studies at extreme conditionsRoom Great Hall K9Chair Alexandra Friedrich (Vienna/AT; Würzburg, Frankfurt a. M./DE)

10.20 Structural complexity of iron oxides at high pressures and temperatures Elena Bykova (Bayreuth/DE) 11.00 Reliability of multigrain indexing for orthorhombic polycrystals O 1.1 above 1 MBar: application to MgSiO3 post-perovskite Christopher Langrand, Nadège Hilairet (Lille/FR) Carole Nisr (Tempe, AZ/US), Mathieu Roskosz (Lille/FR) Gábor Ribárik (Budapest/HU), Gavin B.M. Vaughan (Grenoble/FR) Sébastien Merkel (Lille, Paris/FR) 11.20 Variant selection in the bcc-hcp transition in FeO 1.2 Sébastien Merkel (Lille, Paris/FR), Ainhoa Lincot (Lille, Grenoble/FR) Sylvain Petitgirard (Bayreuth/DE) 11.40 A new high pressure phase transition in clinoferrosilite: in situ singleO 1.3 crystal X-ray diffraction study Anna S. Pakhomova, Leyla Ismailova, Elena Bykova, Maxim Bykov Tiziana Boffa Ballaran, Leonid Dubrovinsky (Bayreuth/DE)

12.00 Occupancy transitions in hexagonal clathrate hydratesO 1.4 John S. Loveday, Richard Nelmes (Edinburgh/GB)

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Scientific Programme • Tuesday, 6 September 2016

10.20–12.20 MS 18A – Dynamic compression and time resolved measurements: from meteorites to novel materialsRoom K5Chair Alexander F. Goncharov (Washington D.C./US) 10.20 Dynamic high temperatures in the diamond cell: pump-probe measurements of optical and transport properties at extremes R. Stewart McWilliams (Edinburgh/GB) 11.00 Fast compression and decompression capabilities and experiments atO 18.1 HPCAT, APS Stanislav Sinogeikin, Jesse Smith, Chuanlong Lin, Eric Rod Guoyin Shen (Argonne, IL/US) 11.20 Sub-millisecond time-resolved XAS as a probe of the dynamics of O 18.2 structural phase transitions Sakura Pascarelli (Grenoble/FR), Agnès Dewaele (Bruyères-le-Châtel/FR) Olivier Mathon (Grenoble/FR), Ramesh André Florent Occelli (Bruyères-le-Châtel/FR), Tetsuo Irifune (Matsuyama/JP) Paul Loubeyre (Bruyères-le-Châtel/FR) 11.40 Laser shock experiments at ESRF: developments and first resultsO 18.3 Raffaella Torchio (Grenoble/FR), Alessandra Benuzzi, Tommaso Vinci Alessandrs Ravasio (Palaiseau/FR), Fabien Dorchies (Talence/FR) Emilien Lescoute, Arnaud Sollier (Paris/FR) Richard Briggs, Olivier Mathon, Sakura Pascarelli (Grenoble/FR) 12.00 Double-sided pulsed laser heating system for time resolved O 18.4 geoscience and materials science applications Georgios Aprilis (Bayreuth/DE), Cornelius Strohm (Hamburg/DE) Ilya Kupenko (Grenoble/FR; Münster, Bayreuth/DE) Catherine McCammon, Denis Vasiukov, Sven Linhardt Leonid Dubrovinsky, Natalia Dubrovinskaia (Bayreuth/DE)

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Programme 53

Scientific Programme • Tuesday, 6 September 2016

10.20–12.20 MS 11A – High pressure synthetic chemistryRoom K6Chair Hubert Huppertz (Innsbruck/AT)

10.20 New forms of silica and aluminosilocates from hydrothermal environments at gigapascal pressures Ulrich Häussermann (Stockholm/SE) 11.00 Unexpected high pressure and high temperature chemistry in Xe-N2O 11.1 mixtures Dominique Laniel, Gunnar Weck, Paul Loubeyre (Bruyères-le-Châtel/FR) Simone de Panfilis (Rome/IT), Mario Santoro (Florence/IT) Federico Gorelli (Sesto Fiorentino/IT), Olivier Mathon Gaston Garbarino, Mohamed Mezouar (Grenoble/FR) 11.20 Reaction between nickel or iron with xenon under high pressureO 11.2 Agnès Dewaele, Charles Pepin (Bruyères-le-Châtel/FR) Gaston Garbarino (Grenoble/FR) Gregory Geneste (Bruyères-le-Châtel/FR) 11.40 Rapid polycyclic polymerization of linear dicyanoacetylene activatedO 11.3 by pressure Huiyang Gou (Beijing/CN), Timothy Strobel (Washington D.C./US) 12.00 Synthesis of highly transparent triclinic Al2SiO5 kyaniteO 11.4 Nico Alexander Gaida (Kiel/DE), Norimasa Nishiyama (Hamburg/DE) Oliver Beermann, Christopher Giehl, Astrid Holzheid (Kiel/DE) Atsunobu Masuno (Tokyo/JP), Ulrich Schürmann Lorenz Kienle (Kiel/DE)

10.20–12.20 MS 12A – Novel physical phenomena at high pressures and low temperaturesRoom K7Chair Mohsen Abd-Elmeguid (Cologne/DE) 10.20 Systems with correlated electrons at high pressure Daniel Khomskii (Cologne/DE)

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Scientific Programme • Tuesday, 6 September 2016

11.00 Intriguing electrical-transport behavior in the high pressure phase ofO 12.1 the hybridization gapped semiconductor FeGa3 Giovanni Hearne, Mustafa Ahmed, Philip Musyimi Emanuela Carleschi, Bryan Doyle (Johannesburg/ZA) 11.20 Competing magnetic and structural states in multiferroic RMn2O5 atO 12.2 high pressure Denis P. Kozlenko (Dubna/RU), Toan Dang (Da Nang/VN) Sergey Kichanov, Evgeniy Lukin (Dubna/RU), Ali Mammadov (Baku/AZ) Sakin Jabarov (Da Nang/VN, Baku/AZ), Leonid Dubrovinsky (Bayreuth/DE) Hanns-Peter Liemann (Hamburg/DE) Wolfgang Morgenroth (Frankfurt a. M./DE) Rafiga Mehdiyeva (Baku/AZ), Boris Savenko (Dubna/RU) Valery Smotrakov (Rostov-on-Don/RU) 11.40 Pressure-induced superconductivity in iron-based spin-ladder O 12.3 compound BaFe2S3 and related materials Hiroki Takahashi, Chizuru Kawashima, Hideto Soeda Yasuyuki Hirata (Tokyo/JP), Takafumi Hawai, Yusuke Nambu Taku Sato, Kenya Ohgushi (Sendai/JP) 12.00 Spin-libron coupling in solid oxygen under pressureO 12.4 Stefan Klotz (Paris/FR), Federico Gorelli (Sesto Fiorentino/IT) Mario Santoro (Florence/IT), Pooya Elahitalighani (Paris/FR)

12.20–12.40 HP Community PhotoRoom ARVENA Hotel

12.20–14.00 Lunch Break in the industrial exhibition and in the restaurant

14.00–16.00 Discussion Session: High-pressure neutrons in the next decadeRoom Great Hall K9Chairs Malcolm Guthrie (Lund/SE), John S. Loveday (Edinburgh/GB)

14.00–16.00 Poster Session IRoom K1+2 (see page 79ff)

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Programme 55

Scientific Programme • Tuesday, 6 September 2016

16.20–19.00 MS 1B – Structural studies at extreme conditionsRoom Great Hall K9Chair John S. Loveday (Edinburgh/GB)

16.20 Phase-diagrams of the elements – What do we learn?O 1.5 Wilfried B. Holzapfel (Paderborn/DE) 16.40 High-pressure X-ray diffraction, Raman, and computational studiesO 1.6 of MgCl2 up to 1 Mbar: Extensive pressure stability of the β-MgCl2 layered structure Elissaios Stavrou, Joseph M. Zaug (Livermore, CA/US) Yansun Yao (Saskatoon, SK/CA), Sorin Bastea (Livermore, CA/US) Bora Kalkan (Berkeley, CA/US), Zuzana Konopkova (Hamburg/DE) Martin Kunz (Berkeley, CA/US) 17.00 Revised phase diagram of the FeSe superconductorO 1.7 Volodymyr Svitlyk, Matthias Raba, Pierre Rodiere Pierre Toulemonde, Dmitry Chernyshov, Vladimir Dmitriev Mohamed Mezouar (Grenoble/FR) 17.20 “Pressure – composition” phase diagram of hydrogen sulfideO 1.9 Ivan Kruglov, Artem Oganov (Moscow, Dolgoprudny/RU) Alexander F. Goncharov (Washington D.C./US)

17.40 New high-pressure phase with Ni2In-type structure in lithiumO 1.10 disulfide (Li2S) Oleg Barkalov (Chernogolovka/RU; Dresden/DE) Pavel Naumov (Dresden/DE; Chernogolovka/RU) Sergey A. Medvedev Claudia Felser (Dresden/DE) 18.00 Deformation peculiarities and phase transformations in boron carbideO 1.11 and silicon after the treatment in planetary mill. HRT studies Boris Kulnitskiy, Mikhail Annenkov, Igor Perezhogin Mikhail Popov (Troitsk, Moscow, Dolgoprudny/RU) Danila Ovsyannikov (Troitsk, Moscow/RU) Vladimir Blank (Troitsk, Moscow, Dolgoprudny/RU)

18.20 Pressure dependence of multiphonon resonant Raman scattering onO 1.12 2Hc-MoS2 microcrystalline samples Jesus Gonzalez, Fernando Rodríguez, Rafael Valiente (Santander/ES)

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Scientific Programme • Tuesday, 6 September 2016

16.20–19.00 MS 18B – Dynamic compression and time resolved measurements: from meteorites to novel materialsRoom K5Chair Thomas S. Duffy (Princeton, NJ/US) 16.20 Melting and Solidification as a Planetary Phenomenon Richard G. Kraus (Livermore, CA/US) 17.00 X-ray diffraction measurements of phase transitions and melting in O 18.5 shock-compressed scandium Richard Briggs (Grenoble/FR), Amy Coleman Martin Gorman (Edinburgh/GB), Emilien Lescoute (Paris/FR) Olivier Mathon (Grenoble/FR), Malcolm I. McMahon (Edinburgh/GB) Florent Occelli (Bruyères-le-Châtel/FR), Sakura Pascarelli (Grenoble/FR) Arnaud Sollier (Paris/FR), Raffaella Torchio (Grenoble/FR)

17.20 X-ray diffraction of water dynamically compressed to 4 Mbar andO 18.6 evidence for a new crystalline ice phase Federica Coppari, Marius Millot, James R. Rygg (Stanford, CA/US) Antonio Correa Barrios, Jon H. Eggert (Livermore, CA/US)

17.40 Universal Hugoniot of fluid metals in WDM regime up to 20 TPaO 18.10 William Nellis (Cambridge, MA/US) 18.00 Crystal structure of Fe-Si alloys at TPa pressuresO 18.8 June K. Wicks (Princeton, NJ/US), Raymond F. Smith, Rick Kraus Jon H. Eggert, Federica Coppari (Livermore, CA/US) Matthew Newman (Pasadena, CA/US), Thomas S. Duffy (Princeton, NJ/US)

18.20 Shock induced phase transformations in bismuth probed using O 18.7 femtosecond X-Ray diffraction Martin Gorman (Edinburgh/GB), Richard Briggs (Grenoble/FR) Amy Coleman, R. Stewart McWilliams (Edinburgh/GB) David McGonegle (Oxford/GB), Emma McBride (Stanford, CA/US) Cindy Bolme (Los Alamos, NM/US), Dayne Fratanduono (Livermore, CA/US) Zhou Xing Eric Galtier (Stanford, CA/US), Hae Ja Lee (Palo Alto, CA/US) Eduardo Granados (Stanford, CA/US) Raymond F. Smith Jon H. Eggert, Gilbert W. Collins (Livermore, CA/US) Justin Wark, Malcolm I. McMahon (Edinburgh/GB)

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Programme 57

Scientific Programme • Tuesday, 6 September 2016

18.40 Moving beyond feasibility in ultrafast shock chemistry experimentsO 18.9 Michael Armstrong, Joseph M. Zaug, Jonathan Crowhurst Harry Radousky, James Lewicki, April Sawvel, Elissaios Stavrou Paulius Grivickas (Livermore, CA/US) 16.20–19.00 MS 17 – Melting at high pressures: new methods, new findings, and new controversies?Room K6Chair Reinhard Boehler (Washington D.C./US)

16.20 High pressure High Temperature X-ray studies in the laser heated diamond anvil cell – Problems and solutions Mohamed Mezouar (Grenoble/FR) 17.00 Iron melting at megabar pressures determined by x-ray absorption O 17.1 spectroscopy Giuliana Aquilanti (Trieste/IT) Angela Trapananti (Camerino/IT; Grenoble/FR) Amol Karandikar (Washington D.C./US; Frankfurt a. M./DE) Innokenty Kantor (Grenoble/FR; Kongens Lyngby/DK) Carlo Marini (Cerdanyola del Valles/ES; Grenoble/FR) Olivier Mathon, Sakura Pascarelli (Grenoble/FR) Reinhard Boehler (Washington D.C./US) 17.20 Melting of iron alloys in Laser-Heated Diamond Anvil Cell:O 17.2 converging results using different in situ and ex-situ diagnostics Guillaume Morard (Paris/FR)

17.40 Local structure of molten 3d metals under extreme conditions of O 17.3 pressure and temperature by means of X-ray absorption spectroscopy Silvia Boccato, Raffaella Torchio (Grenoble/FR) Innokenty Kantor (Grenoble/FR; Kongens Lyngby/DK) Olivier Mathon (Grenoble/FR) Angela Trapananti (Camerino/IT; Grenoble/FR) Paola D’Angelo (Rome/IT), Simone Anzellini (Didcot/GB) Guillaume Morard (Paris/FR), Ruggero Giampaoli Alessandro Smareglia (Grenoble/FR), Tetsuo Irifune (Matsuyama/JP) Sakura Pascarelli (Grenoble/FR)

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Scientific Programme • Tuesday, 6 September 2016

18.00 Melting and structure of light molecular fluids using synchrotron O 17.4 X-ray diffraction Gunnar Weck (Bruyères-le-Châtel/FR), Frédéric Datchi (Paris/FR) Gaston Garbarino (Grenoble/FR), Sandra Ninet Jean-Antoine Queyroux (Paris/FR), Thomas Plisson Paul Loubeyre (Bruyères-le-Châtel/FR) Mohamed Mezouar (Grenoble/FR) 18.20 The existence of a density maximum in fluid tin tetraiodideO 17.5 Kazuhiro Fuchizaki (Matsuyama/JP), Ayako Ohmura (Niigata/JP) Akio Suzuki (Sendai/JP), Keisuke Nishida (Tokyo/JP) Hiroyuki Saitoh (Sayo‒cho/JP), Nozomu Hamaya (Tokyo/JP) 18.40 Melting and liquid structure of ammonia at high pressure andO 17.6 temperature Jean-Antoine Queyroux, Ninet Sandra (Paris/FR) Gunnar Weck (Bruyères-le-Châtel/FR), Gaston Garbarino (Grenoble/FR) Thomas Plisson (Bruyères-le-Châtel/FR) Mohamed Mezouar (Grenoble/FR), Frédéric Datchi (Paris/FR)

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Scientific Programme • Tuesday, 6 September 2016

16.20–19.00 MS 12B – Novel physical phenomena at high pressures and low temperaturesRoom K7Chair Karl Syassen (Stuttgart/DE) 16.20 Strongly Enhanced Magnetic Ordering Temperatures in Lanthanides at Extreme Pressure James S. Schilling (St. Louis, MO/US) 17.00 Magnetism and valence in the CsCl-phases of EuO, EuS and EuSe at O 12.5 extreme pressures Gerhard Wortmann, Kirsten Rupprecht (Paderborn/DE) Olaf Leopold (Grenoble/FR; Hamburg/DE) Ulrich Ponkratz (Paderborn/DE; Grenoble/FR) 17.20 Ferrromagnetic criticality of uranium intermetallics under pressureO 12.6 Michal Vališka, Petr Opletal, Jan Prokleška, Martin Míšek Vladimír Sechovský (Prague/CZ) 17.40 Magnetism and superconductivity in UGe2O 12.7 Andrew Huxley, Michal Kepa, Calum Lithgow (Edinburgh/GB)

18.00 Correlated states near electronic and structural instabilitiesO 12.8 F. Malte Grosche (Cambridge/GB)

18.20 Electronic structure of Eu2+-doped KBr: volume and bondlengthO 12.9 dependences in phases B1 and B2 Jose Antonio Barreda-Argüeso (Santander/ES), Elsi V. Mejia-Uriarte Oleg Kolokoltsev, Enrique Camarillo, Jose M. Hernández Hector O. Murrieta (Ciudad de Mexico/MX) Fernando Rodríguez Gonzalez (Santander/ES)

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60 Programme

Programme Overview • Wednesday, 7 September 2016

Chairs Time Room Speaker

PL 3 Pressure-induced spin crossover and Mott-Hubburd transitions in ferric oxides

Karl Syassen(Stuttgart/DE)

09.00–10.00 Great Hall K9 Moshe Paz-Pasternak(Tel Aviv/IL)

Chairs Time Room Invited Speakers

2 Complex structures: crystallographic diversity from MOFs to incommensurate structures

Vladimir Dmitriev (Grenoble/FR)

10.20–11.40 Room K5 Maxim Bykov(Bayreuth/DE)

3A Novel in-house high-pressure instrumentation Konstantin Kamenev (Edinburgh/GB)

10.20–11.40 Room K6 Sven Friedemann (Bristol/GB)

18C Dynamic compression and time resolved measurements: from meteorites to novel materials

Malcolm I. McMahon (Edinburgh/GB)

10.20–11.40 Room K7 Ronald Redmer(Rostock/DE)

16 Ultra-high static and dynamic pressures generation

Paul Loubeyre(Bruyères-le-Châtel/FR)

10.20–11.40 Great Hall K9 Takehiko Yagi(Tokyo/JP)

Time Room Speaker

11.45–13.30 Great Hall K9 Marius Millot(Livermore, CA/US) Sylvain Petitgirard (Bayreuth/DE) Andrzej Katrusiak (Poznań/PL)

Time Room Speaker

14.00–18.45 Bayreuth

Conference Excursions

Plenary Talk

Micro Symposia

EHPRG General Assembly

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Programme 61

Scientific Programme • Wednesday, 7 September 2016

09.00–10.00 PL3 – Plenary Lecture 3Room Great Hall K9Chair Karl Syassen (Stuttgart/DE) 09.00 Pressure-induced spin crossover and Mott-Hubburd transitions in ferric oxides Moshe Paz-Pasternak (Tel Aviv/IL)

10.00–10.20 Coffee Break in the industrial exhibition

10.20–11.40 MS 16 – Ultra-high static and dynamic pressures generationRoom Great Hall K9Chair Paul Loubeyre (Bruyères-le-Châtel/FR) 10.20 Challenge of generating pressures beyond the limit of diamond anvil: Double stage anvils fabricated using FIB Takehiko Yagi (Tokyo/JP) 11.00 Toroidal diamond anvil cell to reach multi-MbarO 16.1 Agnès Dewaele, Paul Loubeyre, Florent Occelli (Bruyères-le-Châtel/FR) Mohamed Mezouar (Grenoble/FR) 11.20 Progress in ds-DAC design: Gasketed ds-DACs extend the capabilitiesO 16.2 of investigation of matter at ultra-high pressures Leonid Dubrovinsky, Natalia Dubrovinskaia (Bayreuth/DE) 10.20–11.40 MS 2 – Complex structures: crystallographic diversity from MOFs to incommensurate structuresRoom K5Chair Vladimir Dmitriev (Grenoble/FR) 10.20 Incommensurate crystal structures of transition metal oxychlorides at high pressure Maxim Bykov (Bayreuth/DE)

11.00 Complex crystal structures in bismuth tellurides at high pressureO 2.1 Ingo Loa, Kenneth N. Freeman, Jan-Willem G. Bos Ruth A. Downie (Edinburgh/GB)

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Programme Overview • Wednesday, 7 September 2016

11.20 Structure-property relationships in multiferroic metal-organic O 2.2 frameworks at high pressure Ines Collings, Maxim Bykov, Elena Bykova, Natalia Dubrovinskaia Leonid Dubrovinsky, Sylvain Petitgirard, Denis Vasiukov Catherine McCammon (Bayreuth/DE), Michael Hanfland Damian Paliwoda (Grenoble/FR)

10.20–11.40 MS 3A – Novel in-house high-pressure instrumentationRoom K6Chair Konstantin Kamenev (Edinburgh/GB) 10.20 High pressures studies of electronic reconstructions Sven Friedemann (Bristol/GB) 11.00 The equation of state of 5-nitro-2,4-dihydro-1,2,4,-triazol-3-oneO 3.1 (α-NTO) determined via in-situ optical microscopy an interferometry measurements Elissaios Stavrou, Joseph M. Zaug, Jonathan Crowhurst Sorin Bastea (Livermore, CA/US) 11.20 The equation of state of a polymer blended composite measured O 3.2 directly via in-situ tabletop optical microscopy and interferometry measurements (OMI) Joseph M. Zaug, Elissaios Stavrou, Samuel Weir Steven Falabella (Livermore, CA/US)

10.20–11.40 MS 18C – Dynamic compression and time resolved measurements: from meteorites to novel materialsRoom K7Chair Malcolm I. McMahon (Edinburgh/GB)

10.20 Planetary physics and warm dense matter research Ronald Redmer (Rostock/DE) 11.00 Release behavior and equation of state models for high densityO 18.11 carbon at the national ignition facility Marius Millot, Peter M. Celliers, Philip A. Sterne, Sebastien Hamel Kevin L. Baker, Lorin X. Benedict, Laura F. Berzak-Hopkins Alfredo Correa, Laurent Divol, Sebastien Le Pape, Nathan B. Meezan J. Steven Ross, Cliff Thomas, David P. Turnbull, John D. Moody Gilbert W. Collins (Livermore, CA/US)

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Programme 63

Programme Overview • Wednesday, 7 September 2016

11.20 Investigating the hydrogen plasma phase transition on the nationalO 18.12 ignition facility Peter M. Celliers, Marius Millot, Gilbert W. Collins (Livermore, CA/US) Raymond Jeanloz (Berkeley, CA, Livermore, CA/US), Russell J. Hemley Alexander F. Goncharov (Washington D.C./US) Paul Loubeyre (Bruyères-le-Châtel/FR), Stéphanie Brygoo (Arpjon/FR) R. Stewart McWilliams (Edinburgh/GB), Jon H. Eggert, James R. Rygg Sebastien Le Pape, Dayne Fratanduono, Sebastien Hamel J. Luc Peterson, Nathan B. Meezan, David Braun (Livermore, CA/US)

11.45–13.30 EHPRG General AssemblyRoom Great Hall K9Chair Konstantin Kamenev (Edinburgh/GB)

11.45 Opening of the General Assembly and Ceremony of Presentation of the EHPRG Award 2016 to the Winners Marius Millot & Sylvain Petitgirard

12.00 Recreating planetary interiors in the laboratory with advanced dynamic compression Marius Millot (Livermore, CA/US)

12.30 Density of silicate glasses and melts to extreme conditions of pressure Sylvain Petitgirard (Bayreuth/DE)

13.00 Presentation of the 55th EHPRG Meeting 2017 by Andrzej Katrusiak Election of new members of the EHPRG Committee Closing of the General Assembly 14.00–18.45 Conference Excursions (see page 16 and 17) Lunch bags will be provided in the industrial exhibition

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64 Programme

Programme Overview • Thursday, 8 September 2016

Chairs Time Room Speaker

PL 4 Modern High Pressure Chemistry Karen Friese(Jülich/DE)

09.00–10.00 Great Hall K9 Hubert Huppertz (Innsbruck/AT)

Chairs Time Room Invited Speakers

4A Novel high-pressure instrumentation at large-scale facilities: synchrotrons and FELs

Zuzana Konopkova (Hamburg/DE)

10.20–12.20 Room K5 Karen Appel(Hamburg/DE)

19A Carbonates at extreme conditions and volatiles in Earth and planetary interiors

Björn Winkler(Frankfurt a. M./DE)

16.20–18.20 Room K5 Marco Merlini(Milan/IT)

3B Novel in-house high-pressure instrumentation

Stanislav Sinogeikin (Argonne, IL/US)

10.20–12.20 Room K6

11B High pressure synthetic chemistry Yanbin Wang(Argonne, IL/US)

16.20–18.20 Room K6

1C Structural studies at extreme conditions Maxim Bykov(Bayreuth/DE)

10.20–12.20 Room K7

10A Theoretical modelling of condensed matter at extreme conditions

Igor A. Abrikosov (Moscow/RU, Linköping/SE)

16.20–18.20 Room K7

6A Gregory Rozenberg(Tel Aviv/IL)

10.20–12.20 Great Hall K9 Mikhail I. Eremets (Mainz/DE)

6B Gaston Garbarino (Grenoble/FR)

16.20–18.20 Great Hall K9

Time Room Speaker

Poster Session II 14.00–16.00 Room K1+2

Time Room Speaker

19.00-0.00 Burg Rabenstein

Social Evening

Poster Session

Plenary Talk

Micro Symposia

Transport properties at high pressures

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Programme 65

Scientific Programme • Thursday, 8 September 2016

09.00–10.00 PL4 – Plenary Lecture 4Room Great Hall K9Chair Karen Friese (Jülich/DE)

09.00 Modern High Pressure Chemistry Hubert Huppertz (Innsbruck/AT)

10.00–10.20 Coffee Break in the industrial exhibition 10.20–12.20 MS 6A – Transport properties at high pressuresRoom Great Hall K9Chair Gregory Rozenberg (Tel-Aviv/IL)

10.20 High critical temperature in conventional superconductors Mikhail I. Eremets (Mainz/DE) 11.00 Pressure effects on the transport and crystallographic properties ofO 6.1 the iron based superconductors Gaston Garbarino (Grenoble/FR), Ruben Weht (Buenos Aires/AR) Mohamed Mezouar (Grenoble/FR), Andres Cano (Bordeaux/FR) Manuel Núñez-Regueiro (Grenoble/FR) 11.20 Transport properties of GeSb2Te4 at elevated pressureO 6.2 Samar Layek (Tel Aviv-Yafo/IL), Eran Greenberg (Argonne, IL/US) Bar Hen, Irina Pozin (Tel Aviv-Yafo/IL), Roee Friedman (Beer-Sheva/IL) Victor Shelukhin, Marc Karpovsky Moshe Paz-Pasternak (Tel-Aviv/IL), Eran Sterer (Beer-Sheva/IL) Yoram Dagan, Gregory Rozenberg, Alexander Palevski (Tel Aviv-Yafo/IL)

11.40 Pressure induced superconductivity in Weyl-semimetal MoTe2O 6.3 Yanpeng Qi (Dresden/DE), Pavel Naumov (Dresden/DE; Chernogolovka/RU) Oleg Barkalov (Chernogolovka/RU; Dresden/DE), Walter Schnelle Claudia Felser, Sergey A. Medvedev (Dresden/DE)

12.00 High-pressure-high-temperature synthesis of new superconductingO 6.4 metastable phases of topological insulators Sb2Te3, Bi2Te3 and Bi2Se3 Sergei Buga, Vladimir Kulbachinskii (Moscow, Dolgoprydny/RU) Vladimir Kytin (Moscow/RU), Natalia Lvova, Ilia Pahomov Nadezhda Serebryanaya (Moscow, Dolgoprydny/RU) Nikolai Perov Sergei Tarelkin (Moscow/RU) Vladimir Blank (Troitsk, Moscow, Dolgoprudny/RU)

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Scientific Programme • Thursday, 8 September 2016

10.20–12.20 MS 4A – Novel high-pressure instrumentation at large-scale facilities: synchrotrons and FELsRoom K5Chair Zuzana Konopkova (Hamburg/DE)

10.20 The High Energy Density science instrument at European XFEL: a new user facility for high-pressure research Karen Appel (Hamburg/DE) 11.00 The new high pressure diffraction beamline ID15B of the ESRFO 4.1 Michael Hanfland (Grenoble/FR) 11.20 Cutting-edge synchrotron facilities for advanced sample O 4.2 characterization at extreme conditions Vitali B. Prakapenka (Argonne, IL/US) 11.40 Status of the dedicated high pressure diffraction beamline “Xpress”O 4.3 at Elettra Sychrotron Trieste Boby Joseph, Maurizio Polentarutti, Paolo Lotti, Nishant Kumar Varshney Giorgio Bais (Trieste/IT), Surinder M. Sharma (Mumbai/IN) Dipankar D. Sarma (Bangalore/IN), Andrea Lausi (Trieste/IT)

12.00 Structure of low Z liquids under extreme conditions: from dream toO 4.4 reality Gaston Garbarino (Grenoble/FR), Gunnar Weck (Bruyères-le-Châtel/FR) Frédéric Datchi, Sandra Ninet (Paris/FR) Thomas Plisson (Bruyères-le-Châtel/FR) Dylal K. Spaulding (Bruyères-le-Châtel/FR; Cambridge MA/US) Stany Bauchau (Grenoble/FR), Paul Loubeyre (Bruyères-le-Châtel/FR) Mohamed Mezouar (Grenoble/FR)

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Scientific Programme • Thursday, 8 September 2016

10.20–12.20 MS 3B – Novel in-house high-pressure instrumentationRoom K6Chair Stanislav Sinogeikin (Argonne, IL/US) 10.20 Development of spherical pressure cell for rotation in high magneticO 3.3 field Christopher Ridley, Michal Kepa, Konstantin Kamenev Andrew Huxley (Edinburgh/GB) 10.40 In-situ measurement of the high temperature distribution inside O 3.8 diamond anvil cell by acousto-optical spectral imaging system Alexander Machikhin, Ivan Troyan, Alexei Bykov Pavel Zinin (Honolulu, HI/US; Moscow/RU), Demid Khokhlov Yulia Manturova, Igor Kutuza (Moscow/RU) Vitali B. Prakapenka (Argonne, IL/US) 11.00 High-sensitivity nuclear magnetic resonance up to 30 GPaO 3.5 Thomas Meier (Bayreuth/DE) 11.20 Towards smarter high pressure cells: Integrated pressure calibrationO 3.6 for individual heated multianvil experiments Marcus Schwarz, Christian Schimpf (Freiberg/DE) 11.40 Novel experimental design for high pressure – high temperatureO 3.4 measurements of the electrical resistance in a ‚Paris-Edinburgh‘ large volume press Eyal Yahel, Moran Emuna, Guy Makov, Yaron Greenberg (Beer Sheva/IL)

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Scientific Programme • Thursday, 8 September 2016

10.20–12.20 MS 1C – Structural studies at extreme conditionsRoom K7Chair Maxim Bykov (Bayreuth/DE)

10.20 On the high-pressure phase stability and elastic properties ofO 1.13 β-titanium alloys Dean Smith (Manchester/GB), Ananthi Sankaran Hannah Weekes (London/GB), Daniel Bull (Manchester/GB) Timothy Prior (Hull/GB), David Dye (London/GB) Daniel Errandonea (Suwon/KR; Livermore, CA/US; Valencia/ES) John Proctor (Manchester/GB) 10.40 Structural stability of gallium garnets in the Mbar pressure rangeO 1.14 Virginia Monteseguro-Padrón (Grenoble/FR), Víctor Lavín della Ventura (La Laguna, Tenerife/ES), Gaston Garbarino (Grenoble/FR) 11.00 Pressure-induced phase transitions in the MO2 systems, M=Re, Mo, TcO 1.15 Daniel Mast, Barbara Lavina, Emily Siska, Paul Forster (Las Vegas, NV/US) 11.20 Re-evaluation of the compressibility of Re3B and Re7B3O 1.16 Christopher Neun (Frankfurt a. M./DE) Benedikt Petermüller (Innsbruck/AT), Lkhamsuren Bayarjargal Wolfgang Morgenroth (Frankfurt a. M./DE) Hubert Huppertz (Innsbruck/AT), Björn Winkler (Frankfurt a. M./DE) 11.40 High-pressure investigation of single crystals of α-boronO 1.17 Irina Chuvashova, Elena Bykova, Maxim Bykov (Bayreuth/DE) Biliana Gasharova, Yves-Laurent Mathis (Karlsruhe/DE) Leonid Dubrovinsky, Natalia Dubrovinskaia (Bayreuth/DE) 12.00 The best of both worlds: Combined X-ray and neutron studies at O 1.18 high-pressure using lab source X-ray diffractometers and Laue Neutron Diffraction Christopher Woodall, Jack Binns, Christopher Ridley, Simon Parsons Konstantin Kamenev (Edinburgh/GB), Garry McIntyre (Sydney/AU)

12.20–14.00 Lunch Break in the industrial exhibition and in the restaurant

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Programme 69

Scientific Programme • Thursday, 8 September 2016

14.00–16.00 Poster Session IIRoom K1+2 (see page 91ff)

16.00–16.20 Coffee Break in the industrial exhibition 16.20–18.20 MS 6B – Transport properties at high pressuresRoom Great Hall K9Chair Gaston Garbarino (Grenoble/FR)

16.20 Metal-insulator transition in 2D antiferromagnet FePS3 upon appliedO 6.5 pressure Matthew J. Coak, Charles Robert, C. R. Sebastian Haines Siddarth S. Saxena (Cambridge/GB) 16.40 Direct measurements of thermal conductivity at planetary core O 6.6 conditions Zuzana Konopkova (Hamburg/DE), R. Stewart McWilliams Natalia Gomez-Perez (Edinburgh/GB) Alexander F. Goncharov (Washington D.C./US) 17.00 High-pressure thermopower in MnSiO 6.7 Anna Kusmartseva (Loughborough/GB), Andreas Bauer Marco Halder, Christian Pfleiderer (Munich/DE) 17.20 Emergent phases near quantum critical transitionsO 6.8 C. R. Sebastian Haines, Matthew J. Coak, Cheng Liu, Dey Molnar Siddharth S. Saxena (Cambridge/GB) 17.40 Observation of superconductivity in highly compressed H2S with theO 6.10 help of Mössbauer spectroscopy Ivan A. Troyan (Moscow/RU) Alexander G. Gavriliuk (Moscow, Troitsk/RU) Igor S. Lyubutin (Moscow/RU), Rudolf Rüffer (Grenoble/FR) Aleksandr I. Chumakov (Grenoble/FR)

18.00 Anharmonic effects in atomic hydrogen: superconductivity andO 6.9 lattice dynamical stability Aitor Bergara (Leioa, Donostia/ES), Miguel Borinaga (Donostia/ES) Ion Errea (Leioa, Donostia/ES), Mateo Calandra (Paris/FR) Francesco Mauri (Paris/FR; Rome/IT)

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Scientific Programme • Thursday, 8 September 2016

16.20–18.20 MS 19A – Carbonates at extreme conditions and volatiles in Earth and planetary interiorsRoom K5Chair Björn Winkler (Frankfurt a. M./DE)

16.20 Candidate carbon minerals at Earth‘s mantle conditions Marco Merlini (Milan/IT) 17.00 Transition metal carbonates (MnCO3, CoCO3) at extreme conditionsO 19.1 Stella Chariton (Bayreuth/DE) Valerio Cerantola (Bayreuth/DE; Grenoble/FR), Elena Bykova Maxim Bykov (Bayreuth/DE), Leyla Ismailova (Bayreuth/DE) Ilya Kupenko (Grenoble/FR; Münster, Bayreuth/DE), Georgios Aprilis Catherine McCammon, Leonid Dubrovinsky (Bayreuth/DE) 17.20 High pressure studies on carbonate crystals using coherent O 19.2 anti-Stokes Raman Spectroscopy Chris-Julian Fruhner, Lkhamsuren Bayarjargal Björn Winkler (Frankfurt a. M./DE)

17.40 Melting relations in the system CaCO3-MgCO3 at 6 GPa: O 19.3 A comparision between anhydrous and hydrous conditions Jan Müller, Monika Koch-Müller, Dieter Rhede Richard Wirth (Potsdam/DE)

18.00 High pressure elastic properties of FeCO3O 19.4 Michal Stekiel (Frankfurt a. M./DE), Tra Nguyen Thanh (Grenoble/FR) Stella Chariton, Catherine McCammon (Bayreuth/DE) Alexei Bossak (Grenoble/FR), Keith Refson (Egham/GB) Björn Winkler (Frankfurt a. M./DE)

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Programme 71

Scientific Programme • Thursday, 8 September 2016

16.20–18.20 MS 11B – High pressure synthetic chemistryRoom K6Chair Yanbin Wang (Argonne, IL/US)

16.20 Oriented growth and grain size reduction during phase transitions in O 11.5 hydrous Mg2SiO4: Implications for slab strength variations at transition zone depth Angelika Dorothea Rosa (Grenoble/FR), Nadège Hilairet (Lille/FR) Sujoy Ghosh (Kharagpur/IN), Jean-Phillippe Perrillat (Lyon/FR) Gaston Garbarino (Grenoble/FR), Sébastien Merkel (Lille, Paris/FR) 16.40 High pressure synthesis and study of layered Cr4+ based oxidesO 11.6 Justin Jeanneau, Pierre Toulemonde, André Sulpice, Gyorgy Remenyi Vivian Nassif, Claire Colin, Emmanuelle Suard (Grenoble/FR) Jean-Paul Itié (Gif-sur-Yvette/FR) Manuel Núñez-Regueiro (Grenoble/FR) 17.00 High-pressure synthesis, crystal structure and physical properties ofO 11.7 A-site-ordered perovskite BiCu3Cr4O12 Masahiko Isobe, Martin Etter (Stuttgart/DE), Hiroya Sakurai (Tsukuba/JP), Robert E. Dinnebier, Hidenori Takagi (Stuttgart/DE)

17.20 High-pressure synthesis of novel electrocatalystsO 11.8 Ikuya Yamada, Shunsuke Yagi, Takuto Shirakawa, Makoto Murakami Hirofumi Tsukasaki, Shigeo Mori (Sakai/JP) 17.40 Extending the field of nickel borates via high-pressure synthesisO 11.10 Martin Schmitt, Hubert Huppertz (Innsbruck/AT)

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Scientific Programme • Thursday, 8 September 2016

16.20–18.20 MS 10A – Theoretical modelling of condensed matter at extreme conditionsRoom K7Chair Igor A. Abrikosov (Moscow/RU; Linköping/SE)

16.20 Equations of state for solids under strong compression and effects ofO 10.1 wrong constraints Wilfried B. Holzapfel (Paderborn/DE) 16.40 Electronic correlations and transport properties of ε-Fe at extremeO 10.2 conditions Leonid V. Pourovskii (Linköping/SE; Palaiseau/FR) Jernej Mravlje (Ljubljana/SI) Antoine George (Palaiseau, Paris/FR; Geneva/CH) Sergei Simak (Linköping/SE) Igor A. Abrikosov (Moscow/RU; Linköping/SE)

17.00 Thermodynamic analysis of solid solutions of Fe-H system atO 10.3 hydrogen pressures of several gigapascals Katsutoshi Aoki (Tokyo/JP), Hiroyuki Saitoh Akihiko Machida (Sayo‒cho/JP) 17.20 Computational phase diagrams of gas hydrates under pressureO 10.4 Pattanasak Teeratchanan, Andreas Hermann (Edinburgh/GB)

17.40 Pressure-induced phonon freezing in the Percolation-type Zn (Se, S)O 10.5 mixed crystal: Phonon-polaritons and ab initio calculations Hamadou Dicko, Rami Hajj Hussein, Olivier Pagès (Metz/FR) Alain Polian (Paris/FR), Andrei Postnikov (Metz/FR), Franciszek Firszt Karoll Strzalkowski (Torun/PL), Wojciech Paszkowicz (Warsaw/PL) Laurent Broch (Metz/FR) 18.00 High pressure phase diagram of MgO and FeOO 10.6 Daniel Cebulla, Ronald Redmer (Rostock/DE) 19.00–00.00 Social EveningRoom Burg Rabenstein (see page 14)

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25th ANNUAL MEETINGof the GERMAN CRYSTALLOGRAPHIC SOCIETY (DGK)

27–30 MARCH 2017KARLSRUHEwww.dgk-conference.de

SAVE THE DATE

© KIT Karlsruhe

DG

K

DG

K

© KIT Karlsruhe

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74 Programme

Programme Overview • Friday, 9 September 2016

Chairs Time Room Speaker

PL 5 New Trends and Recent Achievements in Theoretical High Pressure Research

Surendra K. Saxena(Miami, FL/US)

09.00–10.00 Great Hall K9 Renata M. M. Wentzcovitch(Minneapolis, MN/US)

Chairs Time Room Invited Speakers

19B Carbonates at extreme conditions and volatiles in Earth and planetary interiors

Dan Frost(Bayreuth/DE)

10.20–12.20 Room K5 Razvan Caracas(Lyon/FR)

4B Novel high‐pressure instrumentation at large‐scale facilities: synchrotrons and FELs

Sakura Pascarelli (Grenoble/FR)

10.20–12.20 Room K6 Federico Gorelli(Sesto Fiorentino/IT)

10B Theoretical modelling of condensed matter at extreme conditions

Leonid V. Pourovskii (Palaiseau/FR)

10.20–12.20 Room K7 Carlo Pierleoni(L'Aquila/IT)

20 Hydrogen and hydrogen‐rich compounds: new frontiers at high pressures

Agnès Dewaele(Bruyères‐le‐Châtel/FR)

10.20–12.20 Great Hall K9 Yaroslav Filinchuck(Louvain‐la‐Neuve/BE)

Time Room Speaker

12.20–12.40 Great Hall K9 Leonid DubrovinskyNatalia Dubrovinskaia (Bayreuth/DE)

Plenary Talk

Micro Symposia

Closing Ceremony

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Programme 75

Scientific Programme • Friday, 9 September 2016

09.00–10.00 PL5 – Plenary Lecture 5Room Great Hall K9Chair Surendra K. Saxena (Miami, FL/US) 09.00 New Trends and Recent Achievements in Theoretical High Pressure Research Renata M. M. Wentzcovitch (Minneapolis, MN/US)

10.00–10.20 Coffee Break in the industrial exhibition 10.20–12.20 MS 20 – Hydrogen and hydrogen-rich compounds: new frontiers at high pressuresRoom Great Hall K9Chair Agnès Dewaele (Bruyères-le-Châtel/FR)

10.20 Light complex hydrides: an overview of the recent progress Yaroslav Filinchuck (Louvain-la-Neuve/BE) 11.00 Ca-H and Y-H systems under high pressureO 20.1 Stanislav Besedin, Mikhail Eremets (Mainz/DE) 11.20 Determination of the phase diagram of H2/D2 above 300 GPa via O 20.3 synchrotron infrared measurements Paul Loubeyre, Florent Occelli (Bruyères-le-Châtel/FR) Paul Dumas (Bruyères-le-Châtel, Gif-sur-Yvette/FR) 11.40 New melting line and direct liquid-liquid transition evidence forO 20.2 hydrogen up to 300 GPa Changsheng Zha (Washington D.C./US)

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Scientific Programme • Friday, 9 September 2016

10.20–12.20 MS 19B – Carbonates at extreme conditions and volatiles in Earth and planetary interiorsRoom K5Chair Dan Frost (Bayreuth/DE)

10.20 Carbon species in silicate melts and glasses Razvan Caracas (Lyon/FR)

11.00 Vibrational properties of dolomite at extreme conditionsO 19.5 Ilias Efthimiopoulos (Potsdam/DE) 11.20 Stability of high-pressure polymorph of topaz-OHO 19.6 Ryota Abe, Akio Suzuki, Yuki Shibazaki, Shin Ozawa Itaru Ohira (Sendai, Miyagi/JP) Eiji Ohtani (Sendai, Miyagi/JP; Novosibirsk/RU) 11.40 Ammonia monohydrate at high pressureO 19.7 Sandra Ninet, Cailong Liu, Adrien Mafety Jean-Antoine Queyroux (Paris/FR) Craig Wilson (Edinburgh/GB) Keevin Beneut, Gilles Le Marchand, Benoit Baptiste (Paris/FR) Paul Dumas (Bruyères-le-Châtel, Gif-sur-Yvette/FR) Gaston Garbarino (Grenoble/FR), John S. Loveday (Edinburgh/GB) Antonio Marco Saitta, Frédéric Datchi (Paris/FR) 12.00 Shock-wave treatment of carbonates at pressures beyond 100 GPa:O 19.8 New possibilities for an old method? Thomas Schlothauer, Erica Brendler, Christian Schimpf, Edwin Kroke Gerhard Heide (Freiberg/DE)

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Programme 77

Scientific Programme • Friday, 9 September 2016

10.20–12.20 MS 4B – Novel high-pressure instrumentation at large-scale facilities: synchrotrons and FELsRoom K6Chair Sakura Pascarelli (Grenoble/FR)

10.20 Spectroscopy of Rubidium under extreme conditions Federico Gorelli (Sesto Fiorentino/IT) 11.00 Large-volume high pressure research at the advanced photon sourceO 4.6 Yanbin Wang (Argonne, IL/US)

11.20 Millisecond time resolved diffraction study of SrCO3 at highO 4.7 pressures and temperatures Michal Stekiel, Lkhamsuren Bayarjargal, Wolfgang Morgenroth Rita Luchitskaia (Frankfurt a. M./DE) Monika Koch-Müller (Potsdam/DE), Björn Winkler (Frankfurt a. M./DE)

11.40 Neutron depolarization imaging on the pressure dependence of the O 4.8 chromium spinel HgCr2Se4 Pau Jorba, Philipp Schmakat, Michael Wagner, Alexander Regnat Michael Schulz (Garching/DE), Vladimir Tsurkan Alois Loidl (Augsburg/DE), Peter Böni, Christian Pfleiderer (Munich/DE)

12.00 X-ray diffraction experiments on the materials in extreme conditionsO 4.5 (MEC) LCLS x-ray FEL beamline to study phase transformation kinetics in NaCl Raymond F. Smith (Livermore, CA/US), June Wicks (Princeton, NJ/US) Cynthia Bolme, Brian Jensen (Los Alamos, NM/US) Dayne Fratanduono, Damian Swift (Livermore, CA/US) Arianna Gleason (Los Alamos, NM; Palo Alto, CA/US) Sergio Speziale (Potsdam/DE), Karen Appel (Hamburg/DE) Hae Ja Lee, Philip Heimann (Palo Alto, CA/US), Gilbert W. Collins Jon H. Eggert, Tom Duffy (Livermore, CA/US)

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Scientific Programme • Friday, 9 September 2016

10.20–12.20 MS 10B – Theoretical modelling of condensed matter at extreme conditionsRoom K7Chair Leonid V. Pourovskii (Linköping/SE; Palaiseau/FR)

10.20 Theory of the Liquid-liquid phase transition in high pressure hydrogen Carlo Pierleoni (L’Aquila/IT)

11.00 Pressure-induced site-selective mott transition and local moment O 10.7 collapse in Fe2O3 Ivan Leonov (Moscow/RU; Augsburg/DE) Eran Greenberg (Argonne, IL/US), Gregory Rozenberg (Tel-Aviv/IL) Igor A. Abrikosov (Moscow/RU; Linköping/SE)

11.20 First-principles prediction of superconducting H5S2 phase inO 10.8 sulfurhydrogen system Takahiro Ishikawa, Akitaka Nakanishi, Katsuya Shimizu Hiroshi Katayama-Yoshida (Toyonaka/JP), Tatsuki Oda (Kanazawa/JP)

11.40 A proton disorder-order transition in ice look-like AmmoniumO 10.9 Fluoride Adrien Mafety, Christophe Bellin (Paris/FR) Chandrabhas Narayana (Bangalore/IN), Paola Giura Gwenaëlle Rousse (Paris/FR), Jean-Paul Itié (Gif-sur-Yvette/FR) Alain Polian, Abhay Shukla, Antonino Marco Saitta (Paris/FR) 12.00 Understanding the non-existence of the cd→β-Sn phase transitionO 10.10 for carbon by the quantum chemical topology approach Olga Matthies, Miroslav Kohout, Juri Grin (Dresden/DE)

12.20–12.40 Closing CeremonyRoom Great Hall K9

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Programme 79

Poster Session I • Tuesday, 6 September 2016

14.00–16.00 Structural studies at extreme conditionsRoom K1+2

P 1.1 High-pressure behavior of Y/Sm oxalates showing thermomechanical effects on dehydration Boris Zakharov, Alexander Matvienko, Pavel Gribov Elena Boldyreva (Novosibirsk/RU) P 1.2 High pressure infiltration sintering and performance of cBN-Si composites Yinjuan Liu, Duanwei He, Chao Xu, Fangming Liu, Pei Wang Jin Liu (Chengdu/CN) P 1.3 Effect of high pressures on the crystal structure and on negative magnetologische of multicomponent tetragonal chalcogenides Nina Melnikova, Yana Volkova, Alexander Tebenkov (Jekaterinburg/RU) P 1.4 Bond distances and effective pair potentials in CuBr under high pressure and high temperature Akira Yoshiasa (Kumamoto/JP), Yusuke Yasuhiro (Toyonaka/JP) Tsubasa Tobase (Kumamoto/JP), Hiroshi Arima (Sendai/JP) Maki Okube (Yokohama/JP), Akihiko Nakatsuka (Ube/JP) Osamu Ohtaka (Toyonaka/JP) P 1.5 Structural, vibrational, and electronic study of α-As2Te3 under compression Vanesa Paula Cuenca-Gotor, Juan Ángel Sans (Valencia/ES) Jordi Ibáñez (Barcelona/ES) Catalin Popescu (Cerdanyola del Vallés/ES), Oscar Gomis Rosario Vilaplana, Francisco Javier Manjón Herrera (Valencia/ES) Aritz Leonardo (Bilbao, Donostia/ES), Edurne Sagasta (Donostia/ES) Aitziber Suárez-Alcubilla (Bilbao, Donostia/ES) Idoia G. de Gurtubay (Donostia, Bilbao/ES) Miquel Mollar (Valencia/ES) Aitor Bergara (Leioa, Donostia/ES)

P 1.6 Stability of the fergusonite phase in GdNbO4 investigated by high pressure XRD and Raman experiments Julio Pellicer-Porres (Burjassot/ES), Alka B. Garg (Mumbai/IN) Domingo Martínez-García, David Vázquez-Socorro (Valencia/ES) Daniel Errandonea (Suwon/KR; Livermore, CA/US; Valencia/ES) Catalin Popescu (Cerdanyola del Vallés//ES)

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Poster Session I • Tuesday, 6 September 2016

P 1.7 Crystal structure of new high-pressure strontium germanate SrGe2O5 Akihiko Nakatsuka (Ube/JP), Kazumasa Sugiyama (Sendai/JP) Osamu Ohtaka (Toyonaka/JP), Keiko Fujiwara (Ube/JP) Akira Yoshiasa (Kumamoto/JP) P 1.8 The photochemical reaction in crystals at high pressure: crystallographic studies Krzysztof Konieczny, Julia Bąkowicz Ilona Turowska-Tyrk (Wrocław/PL) P 1.9 The monitoring of structural transformations brought about by a photochemical reaction in crystals at high pressure Tomasz Galica, Julia Bąkowicz, Krzysztof Konieczny Ilona Turowska-Tyrk (Wrocław/PL) P 1.10 Phase transitions in Silicon from 16 GPa up to 50 GPa Alexander Tebenkov, Ekaterina Vershinina Ekaterina Chubarenko (Jekaterinburg/RU) P 1.11 High-pressure studies of energetic co-crystals Karl Hope (Edinburgh, Harwell/GB), Daniel Ward Hayleigh Lloyd (Edinburgh/GB) Steven Hunter (Edinburgh/GB; Aberdeen, MD/US) Craig Bull (Didcot/GB), Colin R. Pulham (Edinburgh/GB)

P 1.12 Phase transition systematics in BiVO4 by means of high pressure-high temperature Raman experiments David Vázquez-Socorro (Valencia/ES), Julio Pellicer-Porres (Burjassot/ES) Domingo Martínez-García (Valencia/ES) Daniel Errandonea (Suwon/KR; Livermore, CA/US; Valencia/ES) S. N. Achary (Trombay, Mumbai/IN), Alex J. E. Rettie Charles Buddie-Mullins (Austin, TX/US)

P 1.13 Pressure-induced structural changes of Europium hydride under high-pressure H2 condition Keiji Kuno, Takahiro Matsuoka, Takaya Nakagawa (Gifu/JP) Naohisa Hirao, Yasuo Ohishi, Akihiko Machida (Sayo-cho/JP) Katsutoshi Aoki (Tokyo/JP), Katsuya Shimizu (Toyonaka/JP) Tetsuji Kume, Shigeo Sasaki (Gifu/JP)

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Programme 81

Poster Session I • Tuesday, 6 September 2016

P 1.14 High pressure diffraction study of K2AgF4 Jakub Gawraczyński, Dominik Kurzydłowski, Mariana Derzsi Armand Budzianowski (Warsaw/PL) Viktor Struzkhin (Washington D.C./US), Zoran Mazej (Ljubljana/SI) Wojciech Grochala (Warsaw/PL) P 1.15 Structural and vibrational properties of single crystals of Scandia, Sc2O3 under high pressure Sergey Ovsyannikov, Elena Bykova, Maxim Bykov, Michelle D. Wenz Anna S. Pakhomova (Bayreuth/DE), Konstantin Glazyrin Hanns-Peter Liermann (Hamburg/DE) Leonid Dubrovinsky (Bayreuth/DE) P 1.16 High-pressure phase transition of AgO, a prototypical mixed-valent system: Raman, XRD, and DFT study Adam Grzelak, Jakub Gawraczyński (Warsaw/PL) Tomasz Jaroń (Washington, D.C./US; Warsaw/PL), Mariana Derzsi Izabela Włodarska (Warsaw/PL), Maddury Somayazulu Viktor Struzkhin (Washington D.C./US) Wojciech Grochala (Warsaw/PL)

P 1.17 Inspecting high pressure ‘self-insertion’ in CoSb3 by means of single crystal X-ray diffraction Konstantin Glazyrin, Pavel Alexeev, Ilya Sergeev (Hamburg/DE) Raphaël P. Hermann (Oak Ridge, TN/US) P 1.18 Influence of plastic deformation under pressure upon synthesis of Al-Fe and Zr-Fe alloys from elemental powders Arkadiy Dobromyslov (Jekaterinburg/RU)

P 1.19 Nonmetallization and band inversion in beryllium dicarbide at high pressure Fei Li, HeNan Du, YanHui Liu (Yanji/CN), Yanming Ma (Changchun/CN)

P 1.20 Pressure confinement effect in monolayer and few layer MoS2s Fangfei Li, Yalan Yan, Bo Han, Liang Li, Xiaoli Huang, Yuanbo Gong Qiang Zhou, Tian Cui (Changchun/CN)

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82 Programme

Poster Session I • Tuesday, 6 September 2016

P 1.21 High pressure spectroscopic study of InxAl1-xN (x~0.7) Kyriokos Filintoglou, Georgios Papadopoulos, Ioannis Arvanitidis Dimitrios Christofilos, Sotirios Ves, Gerasimos A. Kourouklis George P. Dimitrakopulos (Thessaloniki/GR), Adam Adikimenakis Alexandros Georgakilas (Heraklion/GR) P 1.22 A new ethane polymorph Marcin Podsiadlo, Anna Olejniczak, Andrzej Katrusiak (Poznań/PL) P 1.23 Neutron diffraction studies of shockwave-synthesized γ – Si3N4 material Anke Köhler, Thomas Schlothauer (Freiberg/DE) Alexandra Franz (Berlin/DE), Gerhard Heide, David Rafaja (Freiberg/DE) P 1.24 Pressure-induced structural transformations in AFeX4 (A:[CnH2n+1]4N; n=1-4; X: Cl, Br) compounds Fernando Aguado, Jose Antonio Barreda-Argüeso, Rafael Valiente Jesus Gonzalez, Fernando Rodríguez (Santander/ES)

P 1.25 The high pressure behavior of Mo2GaC and Mo2Ga2C Mark Nikolaevsky (Beer Sheva/IL), Roee Friedman (Tel Aviv/IL) Sankalp Kota, Joseph Halim (Philadelphia, PA/US) El’ad N. Caspi (Beer Sheva/IL) Michel W. Barsoum (Philadelphia, PA/US) Aviva Melchior (Beer Sheva/IL)

P 1.26 A New Approach for in-situ Determination of Pressure and Temperature in Multi-Anvil High Pressure Apparatus Xuebing Wang, Ting Chen, Xintong Qi, Yongtao Zou, Jennifer Kung Tony Yu (Stony Brook, NY, Argonne, IL/US), Yanbin Wang (Argonne, IL/US) Robert C. Liebermann, Baosheng Li (Stony Brook, NY/US)

P 3.2 A monitoring of pressure-induced phase transitions in Si beneath diamond indenters; in-situ and ex-situ approaches Yun-Hee Lee, Yong-Jae Kim, Sooheyong Lee, Yongil Kim Geun Woo Lee (Daejeon/KR)

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Programme 83

Poster Session I • Tuesday, 6 September 2016

14.00–16.00 Novel high-pressure instrumentation at large-scale facilities: neutronsRoom K1+2

P 5.1 Octahedral tilting and structural changes in the perovskite laCo0:9Mn0:1O3 at high pressure Mara Capone (Edinburgh, Didcot/GB; Lund/SE) John S. Loveday (Edinburgh/GB), Malcolm Guthrie (Lund/SE) Craig Bull (Didcot/GB)

14.00–16.00 Magnetism at extreme conditionsRoom K1+2

P 7.1 Relevance between Li+-ion diffusion and elastomagnetic softness in solids, high pressure muon-spin rotation and relaxation on Li[LixMn2−x] O4 with 0 ≤ x ≤ 1/3 Kazuhiko Mukai (Nagakute/JP), Daniel Andreica (Cluj-Napoca/RO) Alex Amato (Villigen/CH), Jun Sugiyama (Nagakute/JP) P 7.2 Effect of low magnetic field and high pressure on the magnetic response of MnP clusters embedded in the chalcopyrite matrix Temirlan Arslanov, Akhmedbek Mollaev Rasul Arslanov (Makhachkala/RU), Lukasz Kilanski (Warsaw/PL) Irina Fedorchenko, Sergey Marenkin (Moscow/RU) P 7.3 High-pressure synthesis and magnetic properties of A-site columnar ordered double perovskites, LnMn(B0.5Ti0.5)2O6 Gen Shimura, Yuichi Shirako, Ken Niwa Masashi Hasegawa (Nagoya, Aichi/JP)

P 7.4 Structural complexity at high pressure in supramolecular analogues of frustrated magnets Andrew Cairns (Oxford/GB; Grenoble/FR) Matthew Cliffe (Cambridge/GB), Joseph Paddison (Atlanta, GA/US) Dominik Daiseberger (Harwell/GB) François-Xavier Coudert (Paris/FR) Matthew Tucker (Oak Ridge, TN/US), Andrew Goodwin (Oxford/GB)

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84 Programme

Poster Session I • Tuesday, 6 September 2016

14.00–16.00 Non-crystalline state at high pressureRoom K1+2

P 9.1 Influence of the hydrogen bonding degree on the elastic properties of propylene glycol oligomers under high pressure Igor Danilov (Troitsk, Moscow, Dolgoprudny/RU) Elena Gronitskaya (Troitsk, Moscow/RU), Alexander Lyapin Vadim V. Brazhkin (Troitsk, Moscow, Dolgoprudny/RU) P 9.2 Probing fluid CH4 deep into the supercritical region: Raman and X-ray diffraction measurements John Proctor, Dean Smith (Manchester/GB) Andrei Sapelkin (London/GB), Paraskevas Parisiades (Grenoble/FR) Daniel Eden, Davind Cantiah (Manchester/GB) Addison Marshall (Hull/GB), Malik Hakeem (Manchester/GB) Vadim V. Brazhkin (Troitsk, Moscow, Dolgoprudny/RU) P 9.4 High pressure Raman study of perfluorotripentylamine (FC70) Stavros Misopoulos, Aspasia Zerfiridou, Kyriokos Filintoglou Dimitrios Christofilos, Sotirios Ves, Gerasimos A. Kourouklis Ioannis Arvanitidis (Thessaloniki/GR)

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Programme 85

Poster Session I • Tuesday, 6 September 2016

14.00–16.00 Novel physical phenomena at high pressures and low temperaturesRoom K1+2

P 12.1 Superconductivity mediated by polar phonons in SrTiO3 Stephen Rowley (Rio de Janeiro/BR; Cambridge/GB) Carsten Enderlein (Cambridge/GB; Rio de Janeiro/BR) Jaime Ferreira de Oliveira (Rio de Janeiro/BR) Francisco Dinola-Neto (Cambridge/GB; Manaus/BR) Siddarth S. Saxena, Gilbert Lonzarich (Cambridge/GB) Elisa Baggio Saitovitch (Rio de Janeiro/BR) P 12.2 Metal-insulator-type transition in a high-pressure iron oxide polymorph Fe4O5 involving dimer and trimer formation Sergey Ovsyannikov, Maxim Bykov, Elena Bykova (Bayreuth/DE) Denis P. Kozlenko (Dubna/RU), Alexander Tsirlin (Augsburg/DE) Alexander Karkin, Vladimir Shchennikov (Jekaterinburg/RU) Sergey Kichanov (Dubna/RU), Huiyang Gou (Beijing/CN) Artem Abkumov, Ricardo Egoavil, Johan Verbeeck (Antwerp/BE) Catherine McCammon (Bayreuth/DE), Vadim Dyadkin Dmitry Chernyshov (Grenoble/FR), Sander van Smaalen Leonid Dubrovinsky (Bayreuth/DE) P 12.3 Linear-in-temperature resistivity close to a topological metal insulaor transition in ultra-multi valley fcc-Ytterbium Carsten Enderlein (Cambridge/GB; Rio de Janeiro/BR) Elisa Baggio Saitovitch, Magda Fontes Mucio Continentino (Rio de Janeiro/BR)

P 12.4 High pressure Raman and ab initio study of TlGaSe2 Sakin Jabarov (Da Nang/VN, Baku/AZ), Tofig Mammadov Firudin Hashimzade (Baku/AZ), Leonid Dubrovinsky (Bayreuth/DE) Sardar Babayev, Vafa Alieva (Baku/AZ), Toan Dang (Da Nang/VN) P 12.5 Structural and electronic properties of hcp-Os at ultrahigh pressure Johan Jönsson, Marcus Ekholm (Linköping/SE), Alexey A. Tal Igor A. Abrikosov (Moscow/RU; Linköping/SE)

P 12.6 Susceptibility measurement under pressure for the low-dimensional spin systems: Cu(C8H16O4) Cl2 and Cu(C10H20O5) Br2·2H2O Natalija van Well, Emmanuel Canevet, Christian Rüegg (Villigen/CH)

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P 12.7 Anomalous field dependence of the susceptibility in Cd3As2 Pascal Reiss (Oxford/GB), Loic Drigo, Nicolas Bruyant (Toulouse/FR) Dharmalingam Prabhakaran, Amir A. Haghighirad Amalia I. Coldea (Oxford/GB) P 12.8 Coexistence of site- and bond-centered electron localization in the high pressure phase of the LuFe2O4 multiferroic Giovanni Hearne, Emanuela Carleschi, Wisdom Sibanda Philip Musyimi (Johannesburg/ZA) Gildas Diguet (Johannesburg/ZA; Grenoble/FR), Yuri Kudasov Dima Maslov, Alexandr Korshunov (Sarov/RU) P 12.9 Pressure effects on weakly anisotropic magnetism in U4Ru7Ge6 Michal Vališka, Jaroslav Valenta, Petr Dolezal, Vladimir Tkac Jan Prokleška, Martin Divis, Vladimír Sechovský (Prague/CZ) P 12.10 Phase diagram of UCoAl doped with low amount of Ru Petr Opletal, Jan Prokleška, Jaroslav Valenta Vladimír Sechovský (Prague/CZ)

P 12.11 Effect of pressure and temperature on lattice dynamics of ZrB12 and LuB12 Yuri Ponosov, Yuri Kuzmin, Elena Shreder (Jekaterinburg/RU) Anna Levchenko, Vladimir Filippov, Natalya Shitsevalova (Kyiv/UA) P 12.12 Evidence for a pressure-induced magnetic quantum transition in UCoGa Martin Míšek, Jan Prokleška, Michal Vališka, Petr Opletal, Jiri Kastil Jiri Kamarad, Vladimír Sechovský (Prague/CZ)

P 12.13 High-pressure studies for hydrogen doped SmFeAsO1-xHx and related materials Takumi Shinzato, Hideto Soeda, Chizuru Kawashima (Tokyo/JP) Soshi Iimura, Hiroshi Okanishi, Satoru Matsuishi Hideo Hosono (Yokohama/JP), Hiroki Takahashi (Tokyo/JP)

P 12.14 Quantum criticality in CeRh(Si1-xGex)3 compounds under pressure Jaroslav Valenta, Jiří Prchal, Marie Kratochvílová, Petr Opletal Vladimír Sechovský (Prague/CZ)

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Poster Session I • Tuesday, 6 September 2016

P 12.15 Pressure effect on the antiferromagnetic transition of UIrGe Jiří Prchal, Michal Vališka, Jaroslav Valenta Vladimír Sechovský (Prague/CZ) P 12.16 Novel physical phenomena at high pressures and low temperatures Mohsen Abd-Elmeguid (Cologne/DE) P 12.17 Stress-strain research on sintering polycrystalline diamond under high pressure Fang Peng, Wentao Li, Qiang Zhang, Cong Fan, Hao Liang Yinjuan Liu Li Lei, Duanwei He (Chengdu/CN)

P 12.18 X-ray emission spectroscopy at extreme conditions at beamline P01, PETRA III, DESY Georg Spiekermann (Potsdam, Hamburg/DE) Manuel Harder (Hamburg/DE) Christopher Weis (Dortmund/DE), Christoph J. Sahle (Grenoble/FR) Ilya Kupenko (Grenoble/FR; Münster, Bayreuth/DE) Valerio Cerantola (Bayreuth/DE; Grenoble/FR) Sylvain Petitgirard (Bayreuth/DE) Wolfgang Morgenroth (Frankfurt a. M./DE) Innokenty Kantor (Grenoble/FR; Kongens Lyngby/DK) Hasan Yavas (Hamburg/DE), Leonid Dubrovinsky (Bayreuth/DE) Metin Tolan (Dortmund/DE), Christian Bressler (Hamburg/DE) Christian Sternemann (Dortmund/DE), Max Wilke (Potsdam/DE)

P 12.19 Development of the EXAFS diagnostic on the National Ignition Facility Federica Coppari, Daniel B. Thorn, Gregory E. Kemp (Livermore, CA/US) R. Stephen Craxton, Emma M. Garcia (Rochester, NY/US), Yuan Ping Jon H. Eggert, Marilyn B. Schneider (Livermore, CA/US)

P 12.20 Ultrafast dynamics in VO2 under high pressures Johannes M. Braun, Harald Schneider, Manfred Helm (Dresden/DE) Lynn A. Boatner (Oak Ridge, TN/US), Robert E. Marvel Richard F. Haglund (Nashville, TN/US), Alexej Pashkin (Dresden/DE)

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14.00–16.00 High pressure mineral physics and geochemistryRoom K1+2 P 15.1 X-ray diffraction study of FeOOH under high pressures and high temperatures Akio Suzuki (Sendai/JP) P 15.2 Deformation behaviour of ferropericlase (Mg, Fe) O in a graphite heated diamond anvil cell under lower mantle conditions Julia Immoor, Hauke Marquardt (Bayreuth/DE) Sergio Speziale (Potsdam/DE), Lowell Miyagi (Salt Lake City, UT/US) Hanns-Peter Liermann (Hamburg/DE)

P 15.3 Mechanical and dynamical stability of As4O6 and As4O6:2He at high pressures Oscar Gomis, Vanesa Paula Cuenca-Gotor, Juan Ángel Sans Francisco Javier Manjón Herrera (Valencia/ES) Julia Contreras-García (Paris/FR) Plácida Rodríguez-Hernández, Alfonso Muñoz (La Laguna, Tenerife/ES) P 15.4 Quantum effects in diamond isotopes at high pressures Pavel Enkovich (Troitsk, Moscow/RU) Vadim V. Brazhkin (Troitsk, Moscow, Dolgoprudny/RU), Sergei Lyapin Albert Novikov (Troitsk, Moscow/RU), Hisao Kanda (Tsukuba, Ibaraki/JP) Sergei Stishov (Troitsk, Moscow/RU)

P 15.5 Interaction of carbonate melts and lower-mantle materials: role in diamond genesis Anna Spivak (Chernogolovka/RU), Leonid Dubrovinsky (Bayreuth/DE) Yuriy Litvin (Chernogolovka/RU) P 15.6 Experimental evidence for ultrabasic-basic evolution of upper mantile magma: role of olivine garnetization Anastasia Kuzyura, Evgeny Limanov, Yuriy Litvin (Chernogolovka/RU)

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Poster Session I • Tuesday, 6 September 2016

P 15.7 Metallization of Silica Analogs: high pressure behavior of PbCl2 and SnCl2 Thomas Smart (Berkeley, CA/US), Earl O’Bannon (Santa Cruz, CA/US) Matthew Diamond, Budhiram Godwal (Berkeley, CA/US) Stephen Stackhouse (Leeds/GB), Quentin Williams (Santa Cruz, CA/US) Raymond Jeanloz (Berkeley, CA, Livermore, CA/US) P 15.8 Bulk modulus of Fe-rich olivines Nicolas Tercé, Frederic Bejina, Misha Bystricky (Toulouse/FR) Matthew Whitaker, Haiyan Chen (Stony Brook, Upton, NY/US) P 15.9 Is electrical resistivity constant on the pressure-dependent melting boundary? Richard Secco, Innocent Ezenwa, Reynold Sukara, Joshua Littleton Wenjun Yong (London/CA)

P 15.10 Equation of state, phase diagram and melting iron at earth core conditions Peter Dorogokupets (Irkutsk/RU), Konstantin Litasov (Novosbirsk/RU) Tatiana Sokolova (Irkutsk/RU), Anna Dymahits (Novosibirsk/RU) P 15.11 The effect of iron content and hydration state on the elastic moduli of single-crystal ringwoodite at high pressure Kirsten Schulze, Hauke Marquardt, Takaaki Kawazoe Alexander Kurnosov (Bayreuth/DE), Monika Koch-Müller (Potsdam/DE) Tiziana Boffa Ballaran (Bayreuth/DE)

P 15.12 Effect of composition on compressibility of skiagite-Fe-majorite garnet Leyla Ismailova, Maxim Bykov, Elena Bykova (Bayreuth/DE) Andrei Bobrov (Moscow/RU), Catherine McCammon Natalia Dubrovinskaia, Leonid Dubrovinsky (Bayreuth/DE) P 15.13 Internally consistent single-crystal elasticity of (Mg, Fe)2SiO4 wadsleyite at high pressures and high temperatures Johannes Buchen, Hauke Marquardt Alexander Kurnosov (Bayreuth/DE), Sergio Speziale (Potsdam/DE) Takaaki Kawazoe, Tiziana Boffa, Ballaran (Bayreuth/DE)

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P 15.14 Combination of laser ultrasonics and Raman spectroscopy in the laser heated diamond anvil cell Dmitrii Velikovskii (Honolulu, HI/US; Moscow/RU) Vitali B. Prakapenka (Argonne, IL/US) Pavel Zinin (Honolulu, HI/US; Moscow/RU) Shiv Sharma (Honolulu, HI/US) P 15.15 Study of the single-crystal elasticity of Mg0.9Fe0.1Si0.9Al0.1O3: bridgmanite up to lower mantle pressures Alexander Kurnosov, Hauke Marquardt, Tiziana Boffa Ballaran Dan Frost (Bayreuth/DE)

14.00–16.00 Melting at high pressures: new methods, new findings, and new controversies?Room K1+2

P 17.1 Phase relations of CuBr under high pressure and temperature Osamu Ohtaka, Yusuke Yasuhiro, Aoki Morimoto (Toyonaka/JP) Akira Yoshiasa, Tsubasa Tobase (Kumamoto/JP) Akihiko Nakatsuka (Ube/JP), Takumi Kikegawa (Tsukuba/JP) Akio Suzuki, Hiroshi Arima (Sendai/JP), Hiroyuki Saitoh (Sayo‒cho/JP)

P 17.2 The influence of wavelength-dependent absorption and temperature gradients on temperature determination in laser-heated diamond-anvil cells Jie Deng, Kanani Lee (New Haven, CT/US) P 17.3 Melting curves of metals with excited electrons in the quasiharmonic approximation Dmitry Minakov (Moscow, Dolgoprudny/RU) Pavel Levashov (Moscow/RU)

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Programme 91

Poster Session II • Thursday, 8 September 2016

14.00–16.00 Novel in-house high-pressure instrumentationRoom K1+2

P 3.1 Polymer-precursor-derived SiC/TiC composites for resistive heaters in multianvil high pressure/high-temperature experiments Marcus Schwarz (Freiberg/DE), Li Guan (Henan/CN; Freiberg/DE) Edwin Kroke (Freiberg/DE)

P 3.3 Generation of pressures over 40 GPa using Kawai-type multi-anvil apparatus with tungsten carbide anvils Takayuki Ishii, Nobuyoshi Miyajima, Takaaki Kawazoe Tomoo Katsura (Bayreuth/DE), Yuji Higo (Kouto/JP) Yoshinori Tange (Kouto, Matsuyama/JP), Noriyoshi Tsujino (Misasa/JP) P 3.4 A system for low temperature experiments in a 3000-ton multi-anvil press Richard Secco, Wenjun Yong (London/CA)

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Poster Session II • Thursday, 8 September 2016

14.00–16.00 Novel high-pressure instrumentation at large-scale facilities: synchrotrons and FELsRoom K1+2

P 4.1 A fast LAMBDA detector and pink beam at the extreme conditions beamline P02.2 at PETRA III Wolfgang Morgenroth (Frankfurt a. M./DE) Hanns-Peter Liermann (Hamburg/DE), Björn Winkler (Frankfurt a. M./DE)

P 4.2 Development of multi-axis DAC oscillation system for powder XRD experiments Hitoshi Yusa (Tsukuba/JP), Naohisa Hirao (Sayo/JP) Yoshihisa Mori (Okayama/JP), Yusuke Seto (Kobe/JP) Yasuo Ohishi (Sayo/JP)

P 4.3 Laser-heating capabilities on I15 at diamond light source Simone Anzellini, Annette Kleppe, Dominik Daisenberger Michael Wharmby, Allan Ross, Stuart Gurney, Jon Thompson Mark Booth, Lee Hudson, Heribert Wilhelm (Didcot/GB) P 4.4 Fast compression using dynamic DAC and LAMBDA detector at ECB, PETRAIII, DESY Zuzana Konopkova, Hanns-Peter Liermann, Mario Wendt David Pennicard, Andre Rothkirch (Hamburg/DE) Zsolt Jenei William Evans (Livermore, CA/US) P 4.5 Development of the falling-sphere technique for measuring the viscosity of liquid under high pressure Ken-ichi Funakoshi (Tokai/JP), Osamu Ohtaka (Toyonaka/JP) P 4.6 A new large volume press with six hydraulic rams installed at P61.2 in PETRAIII extension project Norimasa Nishiyama, Stefan Sonntag (Hamburg/DE) Eleonora Kulik (Hamburg, Bayreuth/DE), Nico Alexander Gaida (Kiel/DE) Tomoo Katsura (Bayreuth/DE) P 4.7 Multi-Staging in LVPs Hans J. Mueller (Potsdam/DE) P 4.8 Advanced high-resolution integrated optical system Vitali B. Prakapenka (Argonne, IL/US) Alexander F. Goncharov (Washington D.C./US)

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Programme 93

Poster Session II • Thursday, 8 September 2016

14.00–16.00 Transport properties at high pressuresRoom K1+2

P 6.1 Electrical transport properties of the unconventional superconductor YFe2Ge2 under high pressure Konstantin Semeniuk, Jiasheng Chen, Zhuo Feng, Philip Brown Yang Zou, Giulio Lampronti, F. Malte Grosche (Cambridge/GB)

P 6.2 Measurement of thermal conductivity using Laser Heated Diamond Anvil Cell Goutam Dev Mukherjee, Pinku Saha (Mohanpur, Nadia/IN) P 6.3 Superconductivity in high-pressure states of bismuth Philip Brown, Konstantin Semeniuk F. Malte Grosche (Cambridge/GB) P 6.4 Resistivity kinetics and phase transformations in graphite and graphene at high pressures Galina Tikhomirova, Tamara Petrosyan Alexander Tebenkov (Jekaterinburg/RU) P 6.5 Thermoelectric properties of Bi2-xSbxTe3-ySey crystals at high pressure up to 20 GPa Igor Korobeynikov (Jekaterinburg/RU) Sergey Ovsyannikov (Bayreuth/DE) Vladimir Shchennikov (Jekaterinburg/RU) P 6.6 Hall effect and electrical resistivity of Cd3As2 + MnAs (30%) composite at high pressure Akhmedbek Mollaev, Luiza Saypulaeva Abdullabek Alibekov (Makhachkala/RU), Sergey Marenkin Irina Fedorchenko (Moscow/RU) P 6.7 Pressure-induced superconductivity above 55 K in disilane Panpan Kong, Alexander P. Drozdov (Mainz/DE) Edwin Kroke (Freiberg/DE), Mikhail I. Eremets (Mainz/DE)

P 6.8 Impedance and structure investigations of C70 at pressure up to 30 GPa Yana Volkova, Vladimir Lentyakov (Jekaterinburg/RU)

P 6.9 Magnetic measurements on rare earth and actinide compounds with a miniature ceramic anvil high pressure cell Naoyuki Tateiwa (Tokai, Naka, Ibaraki/JP)

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P 6.10 Diacell® ChicagoDAC, the ultimate tool for high pressure low temperature transport measurements Christophe L. Guillaume (Reading/GB) Kirill K. Zhuravlev (Diksmuide/BE) 14.00–16.00 Theoretical modelling of condensed matter at extreme conditionsRoom K1+2

P 10.1 Impact of stress on structure and stability of selected group-IV crystalline materials Chorfi Hocine (Oviedo, Constantine/ES), Miguel Angel Salvadó Ruth Franco (Oviedo/ES) Boudjada Fahima (Constantine/ES; Lyon/FR) Jose Manuel Recio (Oviedo/ES) P 10.2 Exploring solids with chemical pressure maps – from prototype to technological materials Hussien Helmy Osman, Miguel Angel Salvadó, Pilar Pertierra Jose Manuel Recio (Oviedo/ES) P 10.3 Elasticity and phase stability of transition metals under extreme static compression Andrey Lugovskoy, Oleg Krasilnikov, Yuri Vekilov (Moscow/RU) P 10.4 Machine learning interatomic potential Ivan Kruglov, Alexey Yanilkin, Oleg Sergeev Artem Oganov (Moscow, Dolgoprudny/RU)

P 10.5 Electronic topological transition in niobium under pressure and its relation to Hooke’s law Andrey Lugovskoy (Moscow/RU), Igor Mosyagin (Linköping/SE) Alena Ponomareva (Moscow/RU) Igor A. Abrikosov (Moscow/RU; Linköping/SE)

P 10.6 Interface pinning for the study of melting – the case of MgO Gabriella Graziano (London/GB) Carlos Pinilla-Castellanos (London/GB; Barranquilla/CO) Lars Stixrude (London/GB)

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Poster Session II • Thursday, 8 September 2016

P 10.7 The anion in metallic matrices model in the light of the chemical pressure formalism Hussien Helmy Osman, Miguel Angel Salvadó, Pilar Pertierra (Oviedo/ES) Angel Vegas (Burgos/ES), Jose Manuel Recio (Oviedo/ES)

P 10.8 Ab initio high pressure study of NaNb3O8 Khatir Babesse (La Laguna, Tenerife/ES) Dalila Hammoutene (El Alia Bab Ezzouar, Algiers/DZ) Plácida Rodríguez-Hernández, Alfonso Muñoz (La Laguna, Tenerife/ES) P 10.9 Structural and electronic behaviour of MoSe2 at Mbar pressures Oto Kohulák, Roman Martoňák (Bratislava/SK) P 10.10 Dynamical properties under pressure of CdGeP2 pictinide semicon ductor from ab initio simulations Alfonso Muñoz, Eduardo Coello Rodríguez, Plácida Rodríguez Hernández (La Laguna, Tenerife/ES)

P 10.11 New high-pressure phases predicted for SiS2 Dusan Plasienka, Roman Martoňák (Bratislava/SK) Erio Tosatti (Trieste/IT) P 10.12 First-principles study on anharmonic effects in simple cubic calcium under high-pressure Akitaka Nakanishi, Takahiro Ishikawa, Katsuya Shimizu (Toyonaka/JP)

P 10.13 Ionic ammonia-water mixtures at high pressures Victor Naden Robinson (Edinburgh/GB), Yanchao Wang Yanming Ma (Changchun/CN), Andreas Hermann (Edinburgh/GB)

P 10.14 Molecular mixtures at high pressures Mandy Bethkenhagen (Rostock/DE) Edmund R. Meyer (Los Alamos, NM/US), Daniel Cebulla (Rostock/DE) Sebastien Hamel (Livermore, CA/US) Nadine Nettelmann (Rostock/DE; Santa Cruz, CA/US) Martin French (Rostock/DE), Christopher Ticknor, Lee A. Collins Joel D. Krass (Los Alamos, NM/US) Jonathan J. Fortney (Santa Cruz, CA/US), Ronald Redmer (Rostock/DE)

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P 10.15 Hydrates on the high pressure range up to 1 GPa Fernando Izquierdo-Ruiz (Oviedo, Torrejón de Ardoz/ES) Alba San José Méndez, Olga Prieto Ballesteros (Torrejón de Ardoz/ES) Jose Manuel Recio (Oviedo/ES) P 10.16 Topological transitions of the Fermi surface of Osmium under pressure – an LDA+DMFT study Marcus Ekholm, Qingguo Feng, Johan Jönsson Igor A. Abrikosov (Moscow/RU; Linköping/SE) P 10.17 Theoretical investigation of disordered Ir-Os alloys under pressure Ekaterina Smirnova (Moscow/RU) Igor A. Abrikosov (Moscow/RU; Linköping/SE)

14.00–16.00 High pressure synthetic chemistryRoom K1+2

P 11.1 Niamond – superhard diamond-cBN alloy formed under high pressure and high temperature Duanwei He, Pei Wang, Yinjuan Liu (Chengdu/CN)

P 11.2 The synthesis of nanocrystalline diamond balls to generate ultra-high pressures in diamond anvil cells Stella Chariton, Maxim Bykov, Natalia Solopova, Natalia Dubrovinskaia Leonid Dubrovinsky (Bayreuth/DE)

P 11.3 Ordering of interstitial nitrogen in hcp iron under high pressure li lei (Chengdu/CN), Leiming Fang (Mianyang/CN), Shangpan Gao Qiwei Hu, Fang Peng, Duanwei He (Chengdu/CN), Xiping Chen Yuanhua Xia, Bo Chen (Mianyang/CN), Hiroaki Ohfuji, Yohei Kojima Tetsuo Irifune (Matsuyama/JP)

P 11.4 Nitrogen pentafluoride accessed via high-pressure synthesis: evidence for hexacoordinated N(V) Dominik Kurzydłowski, Patryk Zaleski-Ejgierd (Warsaw/PL)

P 11.5 Synthesis and crystal structure of the new high-pressure indium borate In19B34O74(OH)11 Daniela Vitzthum, Klaus Wurst, Hubert Huppertz (Innsbruck/AT)

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Poster Session II • Thursday, 8 September 2016

P 11.6 High pressure synthesis of geometric frustrated rare earth pyrochlores RE2Ge2-xSixO7 with multianvil technique Mathis Antlauf, Marcus Schwarz, Edwin Kroke (Freiberg/DE)

P 11.8 High pressure synthesis of Li2IrO3 Lisa Leissner, Marcus Schwarz, Edwin Kroke (Freiberg/DE) P 11.9 Hidden face of Silicon-III BC8 allotrope: Study of samples obtained in the Na-Si system at recordly low pressures Oleksandr Kurakevych, Yann Le Godec (Paris/FR) Wislon Crichton (Grenoble/FR) Timothy Strobel (Washington D.C./US), Christel Gervais (Paris/FR)

P 11.10 Hydrothermal synthesis of GTS-type sodium titanosilicate and temperature dependence of Er3+ ion exchange Keiko Fujiwara, Akihiko Nakatsuka (Ube/JP)

P 11.11 Conversion of graphene and fullerenes to diamond, and diamondlike phases John Proctor, Dean Smith, Malik Hakeem, Hasibah Ahmad Cristina Simionescu, Iain Crowe, Matthew Halsall (Manchester/GB)

P 11.12 Stable solid and aqueous H2CO3 from CO2 and H2O at high pressure and high temperature Hongbo Wang (Mainz/DE) P 11.13 Synthesis of a new high pressure polymorph of potassium iridate Ulrich Bläß, Marcus Schwarz, Edwin Kroke (Freiberg/DE)

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Poster Session II • Thursday, 8 September 2016

14.00–16.00 High pressure bio-, life and food sciences/ Pharmaceutical and organic compoundsRoom K1+2

P 14.1 High pressure Raman study of polyvinyl-toluene Vinay Rastogi, Usha Rao, Shivanand Chaurasia, Himanshu Kumar Poswal Manmohan Kumar, Surinder M. Sharma (Mumbai/IN)

P 14.3 Experimental studies of gas hydrate formation-dissociation under submarine conditions José Alberto Rodríguez Agudo, Jinyoung Park, Giovanni Luzi (Busan/KR) Cornelia Rauh (Berlin/DE), Andreas Wierschem Antonio Delgado (Erlangen/DE)

P 14.4 Production of kefir under high pressure – a case-study of fermentation under innovative conditions Ana C. Ribeiro, Maria J. Mota, Rita P. Lopes (Aveiro/PT) Rita S. Inácio (Aveiro, Porto/PT), Ivonne Delgadillo Jorge M. A. Saraiva (Aveiro/PT)

P 14.5 High pressure processing pasteurization of raw sheep cheese Rita S. Inácio (Aveiro, Porto/PT), Ana M. P. Gomes (Porto/PT) Jorge M. A. Saraiva (Aveiro/PT)

P 14.6 Holding time of HHP as affecting parameter on quality of liquid whole egg Adrienn Tóth, Csaba Németh, Ferenc Horváth, Barbara Csehi Bertold Salamon (Budapest/HU)

P 14.7 Evaluation of quality changes of beetroot juice after high hydrostatic pressure (HHP) processing Barbara Sokolowska, Lukasz Wozniak, Sylwia Skapska Izabela Porebska, Justyna Nasilowska, Sylwester J. Rzoska (Warsaw/PL)

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Poster Session II • Thursday, 8 September 2016

P 14.8 The analysis of protein and physico-chemical changes in high hydrostatic pressure or heat treated whole milk Adrienn Tóth, Barbara Csehi, Klára Pásztor-Huszár Bertold Salamon Ildikó Zeke, Gábor Jónás László Friedrich (Budapest/HU)

P 14.9 Pressure-induced structural phase transition of L-phenylalanine studied by Raman spectroscopy Aspasia Zerfiridou, Kyriokos Filintoglou, Amalia M. Paschou Dimitrios Christofilos, Maria Katsikini, Sotirios Ves Gerasimos A. Kourouklis, Ioannis Arvanitidis (Thessaloniki/GR)

P 14.10 Tuning a colourful organic crystal with pressure Nicholas Funnell (Didcot/GB), Elena Harty, Alex Ha (Oxford/GB) Mark Warren (Didcot/GB), Amber Thompson (Oxford/GB) David Allan (Didcot/GB), Andrew Goodwin (Oxford/GB)

P 14.11 Alternatives to “co-crystal – salt” transitions in glycine co-crystals at low temperature and high pressure – two new examples as a follow-up to a glycine-glutaric acid study Evgeniy Losev, Boris Zakharov, Elena Boldyreva (Novosibirsk/RU)

P 14.12 How do isoenergetic polymorphs behave under pressure? – A case study of tolazamide Alexey Fedorov, Denis Rychkov, Evgeniy Losev, Boris Zakharov Elena Boldyreva (Novosibirsk/RU)

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Poster Session II • Thursday, 8 September 2016

14.00–16.00 Ultra-high static and dynamic pressures generationRoom K1+2

P 16.1 High pressure and high temperature generation using multianvil apparatus with sintered diamond anvils Takeshi Arimoto, Tetsuo Irifune, Masayuki Nishi (Matsuyama/JP) Yoshinori Tange (Kouto, Matsuyama/JP) Takehiro Kunimoto (Matsuyama/JP)

14.00–16.00 Dynamic compression and time resolved measurements: from meteorites to novel materialsRoom K1+2

P 18.1 In situ observation of high-pressure phase transition in silicon carbide under shock loading using ultrafast x-ray diffraction Sally June Tracy (Princeton, NJ/US) Raymond F. Smith (Livermore, CA/US) June K. Wicks (Princeton, NJ/US) Dayne Fratanduono (Livermore, CA/US) Arianna Gleason (Los Alamos, NM; Palo Alto, CA/US) Cindy Bolme (Los Alamos, NM/US), Sergio Speziale (Potsdam/DE) Karen Appel (Hamburg/DE), Vitali B. Prakapenka (Argonne, IL/US) Amalia Fernandez Pañella (Livermore, CA/US) Hae Ja Lee (Palo Alto, CA/US) Bob Nagler, Andy McKinnon, Franz Tavella (Menlo Park, CA/US) Thomas S. Duffy (Princeton, NJ/US)

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Poster Session II • Thursday, 8 September 2016

14.00–16.00 Carbonates at extreme conditions and volatiles in Earth and planetary interiorsRoom K1+2

P 19.1 From the crust to the core, FeCO3 stability field in the deep Earth Valerio Cerantola (Bayreuth/DE; Grenoble/FR) Elena Bykova (Bayreuth/DE), Marco Merlini (Milan/IT) Ilya Kupenko (Grenoble/FR; Münster, Bayreuth/DE), Leyla Ismailova Catherine McCammon (Bayreuth/DE) Innokenty Kantor (Grenoble/FR; Kongens Lyngby/DK) Maxim Bykov (Bayreuth/DE), Sylvain Petitgirard (Bayreuth/DE) Aleksandr I. Chumakov, Rudolf Rüffer (Grenoble/FR) Leonid Dubrovinsky (Bayreuth/DE)

P 19.2 Elastic properties of iron-bearing carbonates and implications for the deep Earth Catherine McCammon, Stella Chariton (Bayreuth/DE) Valerio Cerantola (Bayreuth/DE; Grenoble/FR) Ilya Kupenko (Grenoble/FR; Münster, Bayreuth/DE), Denis Vasiukov Georgios Aprilis (Bayreuth/DE), Aleksandr I. Chumakov (Grenoble/FR) Leonid Dubrovinsky (Bayreuth/DE)

P 19.3 Single-crystal elasticity of SrCO3 by Brillouin spectroscopy and density functional theory calculations Nicole Biedermann, Sergio Speziale (Potsdam/DE) Björn Winkler (Frankfurt a. M./DE), Hans-Josef Reichmann Monika Koch-Müller (Potsdam/DE)

P 19.4 High-pressure phase behavior of SrCO3 – an experimental and computational Raman scattering study Nicole Biedermann, Sergio Speziale (Potsdam/DE) Björn Winkler (Frankfurt a. M./DE), Hans-Josef Reichmann Monika Koch-Müller (Potsdam/DE), Gerhard Heide (Freiberg/DE)

P 19.5 The elastic stiffness tensor of natural dolomite Silvia Gentili (Perugia/IT), Sergio Speziale, Bernd Wunder Hans-Josef Reichmann (Potsdam/DE), Azzurra Zucchini Paola Comodi (Perugia/IT)

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Poster Session II • Thursday, 8 September 2016

P 19.6 Deformation of water ice VI: a single-crystal X-ray diffraction study Anna S. Pakhomova, Tiziana Boffa Ballaran Alexander Kurnosov (Bayreuth/DE)

P 19.7 Coupled substitution of Fe3+ and H+ for Si in wadsleyite: a study by polarized infrared and Mössbauer spectroscopies and single-crystal X-ray diffraction Takaaki Kawazoe, Alok Chaudhari (Bayreuth/DE) Joseph Smyth (Boilder, CO/US), Catherine McCammon (Bayreuth/DE)

P 19.9 Experimental approach for the stability fields of hydrous minerals in the Earth’s lower mantle Itaru Ohira (Sendai, Miyagi/JP) Eiji Ohtani (Sendai, Miyagi/JP; Novosibirsk/RU) Seiji Kamada (Sendai/JP), Naohisa Hirao (Sayo/JP)

P 19.10 Raman study of methane to 160 GPa John Proctor, Davind Cantiah, Malik Hakeem Dean Smith (Manchester/GB)

Page 103: 4–9 September 2016

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Participant List

AAbd-Elmeguid, Mohsen 53, 87University of Cologne, Cologne/DE

Abe, Ryota 76Tohoku University, Sendai, Miyagi/JP

Abrikosov, Igor A. 5, 42, 72, 78, 85, 94, 96Linköping University, Linköping/SE

Aguado, Fernando 82University of Cantabra, Santander/ES

Alabarse, Frederico 41IMPMC - University Pierre and Marie CURIEParis/FR

Angel, Ross J. 24, 25, 51University of Padova, Padova/IT

Antlauf, Mathis 97TU Bergakademie Freiberg, Freiberg/DE

Anzellini, Simone 57, 92Diamond Light Source Ltd., Didcot/GB

Aoki, Katsutoshi 72, 80University of Tokyo, Tokyo/JP

Appel, Karen 66, 77, 100European XFEL GmbH, Hamburg/DE

Aprilis, Georgios 39, 46, 52, 70, 101University of Bayreuth, Bayreuth/DE

Aquilanti, Giuliana 57Elettra-Sincrotrone Trieste S.C.p.A., Trieste/IT

Araki, MasatadaZhuhai Juxin Sci. & Tech. Co. Ltd., Handa Aichi/JP

Arimoto, Takeshi 37, 44, 100Ehime University, Matsuyama/JP

Arslanov, Rasul 83Russian Academy of Sciences, Makhachkala/RU

Arvanitidis, Ioannis 6, 82, 84, 99Aristotle University of ThessalonikiThessaloniki/GR

BBabesse, Khatir 95University of La Laguna, La Laguna, Tenerife/ES

Baggio Saitovitch, Elisa 85Centro Brasileiro de Pesquisas Físicas Rio de Janeiro/BR

Barkalov, Oleg 55, 65Russian Academy of Sciences, Chernogolovka/RU

Bejina, Frederic 37, 89University Toulouse III - Paul SabatierToulouse/FR

Bergara, Aitor 69, 79University of the Basque CountryLeioa, Donostia/ES

Besedin, Stanislav 75Max Planck Institute for Chemistry, Mainz/DE

Biedermann, Nicole 101German Research Centre for GeosciencesPotsdam/DE

Bläß, Ulrich 97TU Bergakademie Freiberg, Freiberg/DE

Boccato, Silvia 57European Synchrotron Radiation FacilityGrenoble/FR

Boehler, Reinhard 5, 38, 41, 43, 49, 57Carnegie Institution for ScienceWashington D.C./US

Boldyreva, Elena 47, 79, 99Novosibirsk State University, Novosibirsk/RU

Braun, Johannes M. 87Technical University Dresden, Dresden/DE

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Participant List

Brazhkin, Vadim V. 48, 84, 88Russian Academy of SciencesTroitsk, Moscow, Dolgoprudny/RU

Briggs, Richard 52, 56European Synchrotron Radiation FacilityGrenoble/FR Brooks, Nick 6, 40Imperial College London, London/GB

Brown, Philip 93University of Cambridge, Cambridge/GB

Buchen, Johannes 89University of Bayreuth, Bayreuth/DE

Buga, Sergei 6, 65Moscow Institute of Physics and TechnologyMoscow, Dolgoprudny/RU

Bull, Craig 38, 42, 80, 83STFC, ISIS Facility, Didcot/GB

Bykov, Maxim 51, 61, 62, 68, 70, 81, 85, 89, 96, 101University of Bayreuth, Bayreuth/DE

Bykova, Elena 39, 51, 62, 68, 70, 81, 85, 89, 101University of Bayreuth, Bayreuth/DE

CCairns, Andrew 83European Synchrotron Radiation Facility Grenoble/FR

Capone, Mara 83University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh/GB

Caracas, Razvan 45, 76École normale supérieure de Lyon, Lyon/FR

Cebulla, Daniel 72, 95University of Rostock, Rostock/DE

Celliers, Peter M. 62, 63Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory,Livermore, CA/US

Cerantola, Valerio 39, 46, 70, 87, 101European Synchrotron Radiation FacilityGrenoble/FR

Chao, Danming Jilin University, Changchun/CN

Chariton, Stella 46, 70, 96, 101University of Bayreuth, Bayreuth/DE

Chen, Xiao-Jia Center for High Pressure Science & Technology Advanced Research, Shanghai/CN

Christofilos, Dimitrios 5, 82, 84, 99Aristotle University of ThessalonikiThessaloniki/GR

Chumakov, Aleksandr I. 39, 43, 46, 69, 101European Synchrotron Radiation FacilityGrenoble/FR

Chuvashova, Irina 68University of Bayreuth, Bayreuth/DE

Coak, Matthew J. 69University of Cambridge, Cambridge/GB

Collings, Ines 62University of Bayreuth, Bayreuth/DE

Coppari, Federica 37, 56, 87Lawrence Livermore National LaboratoryLivermore, CA/US

Cuenca-Gotor, Vanesa Paula 79, 88University of Valencia, Valencia/ES

DDaisenberger, Dominik 46, 92Diamond Light Source Ltd., Didcot/GB

Danilov, Igor 84Russian Academy of SciencesTroitsk, Moscow, Dolgoprudny/RU

Danilson, LisaJacobs JETS, NASA JSC, Houston, TX/US

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Participant List

Degtyareva, Valentina 44Russian Academy of Sciences, Chernogolovka/RU

Deng, Jie 90Yale University, New Haven, CT/US

Dewaele, Agnès 5, 52, 53, 61, 75French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission (CEA), Bruyères-le-Châtel/FR Dmitriev, Vladimir 55, 61European Synchrotron Radiation FacilityGrenoble/FR

Dobromyslov, Arkadiy 81M. N. Miheev Institute of Metal PhysicsJekaterinburg/RU

Dorogokupets, Peter 89Russian Academy of Sciences, Irkutsk/RU

Dubrovinskaia, Natalia 5, 6, 7, 39, 42, 52, 61, 62University of Bayreuth, Bayreuth/DE 68, 89, 96 Dubrovinsky, Leonid 5, 7, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 46 51, 52, 54, 61, 62, 68 70, 81, 85, 87, 88, 89, 96, 101University of Bayreuth, Bayreuth/DE

Duffy, Thomas S. 37, 56, 100Princeton University, Princeton, NJ/US

EEbad-Allah, Jihaan 43University of Augsburg, Augsburg/DE

Efthimiopoulos, Ilias 76German Research Centre for GeosciencesPotsdam/DE

Ekholm, Marcus 42, 85, 96Linköping University, Linköping/SE

Enkovich, Pavel 88Russian Academy of Sciences TroitskMoscow/RU

Eremets, Mikhail I. 5, 65, 93Max Planck Institute for Chemistry, Mainz/DE

FFabbiani, Francesca P. A. 47Georg-August-University GöttingenGöttingen/DE

Falkowski, Viktoria University of Innsbruck, Innsbruck/AT

Fedorov, Alexey 99Novosibirsk State University, Novosibirsk/RU

Filinchuck, Yaroslav 75Université catholique de LouvainLouvain-la-Neuve/BE

Freeman, Kenneth N. 61University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh/GB

Friedemann, Sven 62University of Bristol, Bristol/GB

Friedrich, Alexandra 6, 42, 51University Würzburg, Würzburg/DE

Friese, Karen 5, 65Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH, Jülich/DE

Frost, Dan 76, 90University of Bayreuth, Bayreuth/DE

Fruhner, Chris-Julian 70Goethe University Frankfurt, Frankfurt a. M./DE

Fuchizaki, Kazuhiro 58Ehime University, Matsuyama/JP

Fujiwara, Keiko 80, 97Yamaguchi University, Ube/JP

Funakoshi, Ken-ichi 38, 92Comprehensive Research Organization forScience and Society, Tokai/JP

Funnell, Nicholas 38, 99STFC, ISIS Facility, Didcot/GB

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Participant List

GGaida, Nico Alexander 53, 92University Kiel, Kiel/DE

Galica, Tomasz 80Wroclaw University of Technology, Wrocław/PL

Garbarino, Gaston 6, 53, 58, 65, 66, 68, 69, 71, 76European Synchrotron Radiation Facility Grenoble/FR Gawraczyński, Jakub 81University of Warsaw, Warsaw/PL

Glazyrin, Konstantin 81DESY, Hamburg/DE

Goncharov, Alexander F. 40, 52, 55, 63, 69, 92Carnegie Institution for ScienceWashington D.C./US

Gonzalez, Jesus 6, 47, 55, 82University of Cantabra, Santander/ES

Gorelli, Federico 6, 53, 54, 77University of Florence, Sesto Fiorentino/IT

Gorman, Martin 56University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh/GB

Gou, Huiyang 53, 85HPSTAR, Beijing/CN

Graziano, Gabriella 94University College London, London/GB

Greenberg, Eran 39, 65, 78University of Chicago, Argonne, IL/US

Grosche, F. Malte 59, 93University of Cambridge, Cambridge/GB

Grzelak, Adam 81University of Warsaw, Warsaw/PL

Guillaume, Christophe L. 94University of Reading, Reading/GB

Guthrie, Malcolm 12, 38, 41, 43, 54, 83European Spallation Source ERIC, Lund/SE

HHaberl, Bianca 38, 43Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN/US

Haines, C. R. Sebastian 69University of Cambridge, Cambridge/GB

Hanfland, Michael 5, 46, 62, 66European Synchrotron Radiation FacilityGrenoble/FR

Hassan Osman, Hussien HelmyUniversidad de Oviedo, Oviedo/ES

Hattori, Takanori 38, 45Japan Atomic Energy Agency, Ibaraki/JP

Häussermann, Ulrich 6, 53Stockholm University, Stockholm/SE

Hazael, Rachael 40University College London, London/GB

He, Duanwei 79, 87, 96Sichuan University, Chengdu/CN

Hearne, Giovanni 54, 86University of Johannesburg, Johannesburg/ZA

Henry, Paul European Spallation Source ERIC, Lund/SE

Hermann, Andreas 41, 72, 95University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh/GB

Hernandez, Ignacio 47University of Cantabra, Santander/ES

Hocine, Chorfi 94Universidad de Oviedo, Oviedo, Constantine/ES

Holzapfel, Wilfried B. 51, 55, 72University of Paderborn, Paderborn/DE

Hope, Karl 80University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh/GB

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Participant List

Huppertz, Hubert 5, 28, 53, 65, 68, 71, 96University of Innsbruck, Innsbruck/AT

Huxley, Andrew 59, 67University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh/GB

IImmoor, Julia 88University of Bayreuth, Bayreuth/DE

Irifune, Tetsuo 5, 37, 39, 40, 44, 52, 57, 96, 100Ehime University, Matsuyama/JP Ishii, Takayuki 44, 91University of Bayreuth, Bayreuth/DE

Ishikawa, Takahiro 78, 95Osaka University, Toyonaka/JP

Ismailova, Leyla 39, 51, 70, 89, 101University of Bayreuth, Bayreuth/DE

Isobe, Masahiko 71Max Planck Institute for Solid State Research Stuttgart/DE

Izquierdo-Ruiz, Fernando 96Universidad de OviedoOviedo, Torrejón de Ardoz/ES

JJabarov, Sakin 54, 85The Frank Laboratory of Neutron PhysicsDa Nang/VN, Baku/AZ

Jeanneau, Justin 71Institut NEEL CNRS, Grenoble/FR

Jönsson, Johan 85, 96Linköping University, Linköping/SE

Jorba, Pau 77Technical University of Munich, Munich/DE

Joseph, Boby 45, 66Elettra-Sincrotrone Trieste S.C.p.A., Trieste/IT

KKamenev, Konstantin 6, 8, 38, 42, 62, 63, 67, 68University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh/GB

Katrusiak, Andrzej 6, 47, 63, 82Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań/PL

Kawashima, Chizuru 54, 86Nihon University, Tokyo/JP

Kawazoe, Takaaki 89, 91, 102University of Bayreuth, Bayreuth/DE

Kepa, Michal 59, 67University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh/GB

Khomskii, Daniel 53University of Cologne, Cologne/DE

Klotz, Stefan 5, 6, 38, 39, 41, 46, 54IMPMC - University Pierre and Marie CURIEParis/FR

Ko, Jing YingFriedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen NürnbergNürnberg/DE

Köhler, Anke 82TU Bergakademie Freiberg, Freiberg/DE

Kohulák, Oto 95Comenius University in Bratislava, Bratislava/SK

Konar, Sumit 48University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh/GB

Kong, Panpan 93Max Planck Institute for Chemistry, Mainz/DE

Konieczny, Krzysztof 80Wroclaw University of Technology, Wrocław/PL

Konopkova, Zuzana 55, 66, 69, 92European XFEL GmbH, Hamburg/DE

Korobeynikov, Igor 93M. N. Miheev Institute of Metal PhysicsJekaterinburg/RU

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108 Programme

Participant List

Kozlenko, Denis P. 5, 38, 41, 54, 85The Frank Laboratory of Neutron PhysicsDubna/RU

Kraus, Richard G. 37, 56Lawrence Livermore National LaboratoryLivermore, CA/US

Kruglov, Ivan 55, 94Moscow Institute of Physics and TechnologyMoscow, Dolgoprudny/RU

Kulik, Eleonora 45, 92DESY, Hamburg/DE

Kulnitskiy, Boris 55Moscow Institute of Physics and TechnologyMoscow, Dolgoprudny/RU

Kuno, Keiji 80Gifu University, Gifu/JP

Kuntscher, Christine 43University of Augsburg, Augsburg/DE

Kupenko, Ilya 39, 46, 52, 70, 87, 101University of Münster, Münster/DE

Kurakevych, Oleksandr 71, 97IMPMC - University Pierre and Marie CURIEParis/FR

Kurnosov, Alexander 89, 90, 102University of Bayreuth, Bayreuth/DE

Kurzydłowski, Dominik 81, 96University of Warsaw, Warsaw/PL

Kusmartseva, Anna 69Loughborough University, Loughborough/GB

lLangrand, Christopher 51Université de Lille, Lille/FR

Laniel, Dominique 53French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission (CEA), Bruyères-le-Châtel/FR

Layek, Samar 65Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv/IL

Lebert, Blair 41, 46IMPMC - University Pierre and Marie CURIEParis/FR

Lee, Geun Woo 49, 82Korea Research Institute of Standards andScience, Daejeon/KR

Lee, Yun-Hee 82Korea Research Institute of Standards andScience, Daejeon/KR

Lei, Li 87, 96Sichuan University, Chengdu/CN

Leissner, Lisa 97TU Bergakademie Freiberg, Freiberg/DE

Leonov, Ivan 78University of Augsburg, Augsburg/DE

Li, Fangfei 81Jilin University, Changchun/CN

Liebermann, Robert C. 22, 23, 37, 82Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY/US

Litvin, Yuriy 40, 88Russian Academy of Sciences , Chernogolovka/RU

Liu, YanHui 81Yanbian University, Yanji/CN

Liu, Yinjuan 79, 87, 96Sichuan University, Chengdu/CN

Liu, Zhaodong 44University of Bayreuth, Bayreuth/DE

Liu, YiShijiazhang/CN

Loa, Ingo 6, 61University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh/GB

Page 109: 4–9 September 2016

Programme 109

Participant List

Loubeyre, Paul 37, 52, 53, 58, 61, 63, 66, 75French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission (CEA), Bruyères-le-Châtel/FR

Loveday, John S. 5, 12, 38, 41, 48, 51, 54, 55University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh/GB 76, 83

Lugovskoy, Andrey 94National University of Science and Technology«MISIS», Moscow/RU

Lukin, Evgeniy 38, 54Joint Institute for Nuclear Research, Dubna/RU

Lyubutin, Igor S. 69Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow/RU

MMachikhin, Alexander 67Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow/RU

Maeda, Fumiya 39Tohoku University, Sendai/JP

Mafety, Adrien 76, 7IMPMC - University Pierre and Marie CURIEParis/FR

Manjón Herrera, Francisco Javier 79, 88University of Valencia, Valencia/ES

Manna, Rudra Sekhar 46University of Augsburg, Augsburg/DE

Martínez-García, Domingo 79, 80University of Valencia, Valencia/ES

Mast, Daniel 68University of Nevada, Las Vegas, NV/US

Matthies, Olga 78Max Planck Institute for Chemical Physics of Solids, Dresden/DE

Mazurkiewicz, BozenaNutricia Zakłady Produkcyjne SpOpole/PL

McCammon, Catherine 39, 46, 52, 62, 70, 85, 89 University of Bayreuth, Bayreuth/DE 101, 102

McMahon, Malcolm I. 5, 56, 62University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh/GB

McWilliams, R. Stewart 52, 56, 63, 69University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh/GB

Medvedev, Sergey A. 55, 65Max Planck Institute for Chemical Physics of Solids, Dresden/DE

Meersmann, Filip 6, 40University College London, London/GB

Meier, Thomas 67University of Bayreuth, Bayreuth/DE

Melchior, Aviva 82Nuclear Research Center NEGEV, Beer, Sheva/IL

Melnikova, Nina 79Ural Federal University, Jekaterinburg/RU

Merkel, Sébastien 51, 71Université de Lille, Lille/FR

Merlini, Marco 5, 70, 101University of Milan, Milan/IT

Mezouar, Mohamed 53, 55, 57, 58, 61, 65, 66European Synchrotron Radiation FacilityGrenoble/FR

Millot, Marius 5, 30, 56, 62, 63Lawrence Livermore National LaboratoryLivermore, CA/US

Minakov, Dmitry 90Moscow Institute of Physics and TechnologyMoscow, Dolgoprudny/RU

Míšek, Martin 59, 86Academy of Sciences of the Czech RepublicPrague/CZ

Page 110: 4–9 September 2016

110 Programme

Participant List

Mollaev, Akhmedbek 83, 93Russian Academy of Sciences, Makhachkala/RU

Monteseguro-Padrón, Virginia 68European Synchrotron Radiation Facility Grenoble/FR

Morard, Guillaume 57IMPMC – University Pierre and Marie CURIEParis/FR

Morgenroth, Wolfgang 42, 45, 47, 54, 68, 77, 87, 92Goethe University Frankfurt, Frankfurt a.M./DE Morrow, RyanIFW Dresden, Dresden/DE

Mueller, Hans J. 92German Research Centre for GeosciencesPotsdam/DE

Mukai, Kazuhiko 83Toyota Central R&D Labs., Inc, Nagakute/JP

Mukherjee, Goutam Dev 93Indian Institute of Science Education andResearch Kolkata Mohanpur, Nadia/IN

Mukhina, Elena 38, 41KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm/SE Müller, Jan 70German Research Centre for GeosciencesPotsdam/DE

Muñoz, Alfonso 5, 88, 95University of La laguna, La Laguna, Tenerife/ES

NNaden Robinson, Victor 95University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh/GB

Nakanishi, Akitaka 78, 95Osaka University, Toyonaka/JP

Nakatsuka, Akihiko 79, 80, 90, 97Yamaguchi University, Ube/JP

Nellis, William 56Harvard University, Cambridge, MA/US

Neun, Christopher 68Goethe University Frankfurt, Frankfurt a. M./DE

Nikolaevsky, Mark 82Nuclear Research Center NEGEV, Beer Sheva/IL

OOhira, Itaru 76, 102Tohoku University, Sendai/JP

Ohtaka, Osamu 79, 80, 90, 92Osaka University, Toyonaka/JP

Opletal, Petr 59, 86Charles University in Prague, Prague/CZ

Osman, Hussien Helmy 94, 95Universidad de Oviedo, Oviedo/ES

Ovsyannikov, Sergey 81, 85, 93University of Bayreuth, Bayreuth/DE

PPagès, Olivier 72Université de Lorraine, Metz/FR

Pakhomova, Anna S. 51, 81, 102University of Bayreuth, Bayreuth/DE

Pascarelli, Sakura 39, 45, 52, 56, 57, 77European Synchrotron Radiation Facility Grenoble/FR

Pashkin, Alexej 87Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-RossendorfDresden/DE

Paz-Pasternak, Moshe 6, 26, 27, 46, 61, 65Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv/IL

Pellicer-Porres, Julio 79, 80University of Valencia, Valencia/ES

Peng, Fang 87, 96Sichuan University, Chengdu/CN

Page 111: 4–9 September 2016

Programme 111

Participant List

Pertierra, Pilar 94, 95Universidad de Oviedo, Oviedo/ES

Petitgirard, Sylvain 31, 51, 62, 63, 87, 101University of Bayreuth, Bayreuth/DE

Pierleoni, Carlo 78University of L’Aquila, L’Aquila/IT

Plasienka, Dusan 95Comenius University in Bratislava, Bratislava/SK

Podsiadlo, Marcin 82Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań/PL

Ponosov, Yuri 86Russian Academy of Sciences, Jekaterinburg/RU

Potapkin, VasilyUniversity of Bayreuth, Bayreuth/DE

Pourovskii, Leonid V. 42, 72, 78Ecole Polytechnique, Palaiseau/FR

Prakapenka, Vitali B. 37, 39, 40, 44, 66, 67, 90, 92, 100University of Chicago, Argonne, IL/US

Prchal, Jiří 6, 86, 87Charles University in Prague, Prague/CZ Prescher, Clemens 37, 39, 44University of Cologne, Cologne/DE

Proctor, John 68, 84, 97, 102University of Salford, Manchester/GB

Pruteanu, Ciprian 38, 41, 48University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh/GB

Pugh, Emma 46University of Kent, Kent/GB

QQian, Jiang 42US Synthetic Corporation, Orem, UT/US

Queyroux, Jean-Antoine 58, 76IMPMC - University Pierre and Marie CURIEParis/FR

RRashchenko, Sergey 41Russian Academy of Sciences, Novosibirsk/RU

Rastogi, Vinay 98Bhabha Atomic Research Centre, Mumbai/IN

Rauh, Cornelia 40, 98TU Berlin, Berlin/DE

Redmer, Ronald 62, 72, 95University of Rostock, Rostock/DE

Reiss, Pascal 86Oxford University, Oxford/GB

Ridley, Christopher 42, 67, 68University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh/GB

Rietveld, Ivo 47University Paris Descartes, Paris/FR

Rodríguez Gonzalez, Fernando 6, 42, 59University of Cantabra, Santander/ES

Rodriguez-Velamazan, J. Alberto 38Universidad de Zaragoza, Zaragoza/ES

Rouquette, Jerome 43Montpellier University, Montpellier/FR

Rowland, RichardUniversity of Nevada, Las Vegas, NV/US

Rozenberg, Gregory 5, 65, 78Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv/IL

SSalamat, AshkanUniversity of Nevada, Las Vegas, NV/US

Page 112: 4–9 September 2016

112 Programme

Participant List

Salvadó, Miguel Angel 94, 95Universidad de Oviedo, Oviedo/ES

Sano-Furukawa, Asami 38, 45Japan Atomic Energy Agency, Ibaraki/JP

Saraiva, Jorge M. A. 6, 40, 98University of Aveiro, Aveiro/PT

Saxena, Surendra K. 75Florida International University, Miami, FL/US

Schilling, James S. 59Washington University, Washington D.C./US

Schlothauer, Thomas 76, 82TU Bergakademie Freiberg, Freiberg/DE

Schmitt, Martin 71University of Innsbruck, Innsbruck/AT

Schrodt, Nadine 47Goethe University Frankfurt, Frankfurt a. M./[email protected]

Schulze, Kirsten 89University of Bayreuth, Bayreuth/DE

Schwarz, Marcus 67, 91, 97TU Bergakademie Freiberg, Freiberg/DE

Secco, Richard 89, 91University of Western Ontario, London/CA

Sechovský, Vladimír 59, 86, 87Charles University in Prague, Prague/CZ Semeniuk, Konstantin 93University of Cambridge, Cambridge/GB

Serghiou, George 48University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh/GB

Serovaiskii, Aleksandr 38Gubkin Russian State University of Oil an GasMoscow/RU

Shimura, Gen 83Nagoya University, Nagoya, Aichi/JP

Shinzato, Takumi 86Nihon university, Tokyo/JP

Sieber, MarcSITEC-Sieber Engineering AG, Maur/CH

Sinogeikin, Stanislav 52, 67Carnegie Institution for ScienceWashington D.C./US

Smart, Thomas 89University of California, Argonne, IL/US

Smirnova, Ekaterina 96National University of Science and Technology«MISIS», Moscow/RU

Smith, Raymond F. 37, 56, 77, 100Lawrence Livermore National LaboratoryLivermore, CA/US

Sokolowska, Barbara 98Prof. Waclaw Dabrowski Institute of Agriculturaland Food Biotechnology, Warsaw/PL

Spetzler, Hartmutretired University of Colorado, Erie, CO/US

Speziale, Sergio 77, 88, 89, 100, 101German Research Centre for GeosciencesPotsdam/DE

Spiekermann, Georg 39, 87DESY, Hamburg/DE

Starzonek, Szymon 44Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw/PL

Stavrou, Elissaios 40, 43, 55, 57, 62Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Livermore, CA/US

Stekiel, Michal 70, 77Goethe University Frankfurt, Frankfurt a. M./DE

Sterer, Eran 65Nuclear Research Center NEGEV, Beer Sheva/IL

Page 113: 4–9 September 2016

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Participant List

Struzkhin, Viktor 44, 81Carnegie Institution for ScienceWashington D.C./US

Suzuki, Akio 58, 76, 88, 90, 102Tohoku University, Sendai/JP

Svitlyk, Volodymyr 55European Synchrotron Radiation Facility Grenoble/FR

Syassen, Karl 5, 59, 61Max Planck Institute for Solid State ResearchStuttgart/DE

TTakahashi, Hiroki 54, 86Nihon University, Tokyo/JP

Tateiwa, Naoyuki 93Japan Atomic Energy Agency, Ibaraki/JP

Tebenkov, Alexander 79, 80, 93Ural Federal University, Jekaterinburg/RU

Teeratchanan, Pattanasak 41, 72University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh/GB

Tikhomirova, Galina 93Ural Federal University, Jekaterinburg/RU

Torchio, Raffaella 52, 56, 57European Synchrotron Radiation FacilityGrenoble/FR

Tóth, Adrienn 98, 99Szent István University, Budapest/HU Tracy, Sally June 100Princeton University, Princeton, NJ/US

Tulk, Chris 38Oak Ridge National Laboratory , Oak Ridge, TN/US

UUykur, Ece 43University of Augsburg, Augsburg/DE

VValenta, Jaroslav 86, 87Charles University in Prague, Prague/CZ

Vališka, Michal 59, 86, 87Charles University in Prague, Prague/CZ

van Well, Natalija 85Paul Scherrer Institute, Villigen/CH

Vasiukov, Denis 39, 46, 52, 62, 101University of Bayreuth, Bayreuth/DE

Vázquez-Socorro, David 79, 80University of Valencia, Valencia/ES

Velikovskii, Dmitrii 90Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow/RU

Vitzthum, Daniela 96University of Innsbruck, Innsbruck/AT

Volkova, Yana 79, 93Ural Federal University, Jekaterinburg/RU

WWang, Hongbo 97Max Planck Institute for Chemistry, Mainz/DE

Wang, Yanbin 44, 71, 77, 82University of Chicago, Argonne, IL/US

Weck, Gunnar 53, 58, 66French Alternative Energies and Atomic EnergyCommission (CEA), Bruyères-le-Châtel/FR

Weigel, Coralie 43, 48Montpellier University, Montpellier/FR

Weis, Christopher 39, 87Technical University Dresden, Dresden/DE

Wentzcovitch, Renata M. M. 29, 75University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN/US

Wicks, June K. 37, 56, 100Princeton University, Princeton, NJ/US

Page 114: 4–9 September 2016

114 Programme

Participant List

Wilhelm, Heribert 46, 92Diamond Light Source Ltd., Didcot/GB

Wilhelm, Fabrice 42European Synchrotron Radiation Facility Grenoble/FR

Wilke, Max 39, 87University Potsdam, Potsdam/DE

Winkler, Björn 5, 45, 47, 68, 70, 77, 92, 101Goethe University Frankfurt, Frankfurt a. M./DE

Woodall, Christopher 68University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh/GB

Wortmann, Gerhard 59University of Paderborn, Paderborn/DE

YYagi, Takehiko 22, 44, 61University of Tokyo, Tokyo/JP

Yahel, Eyal 67Nuclear Research Center NEGEV, Beer Sheva/IL

Yamada, Ikuya 71Osaka Prefecture University, Sakai/JP

Yoshiasa, Akira 79, 80, 90Kumamoto University, Kumamoto/JP

Yusa, Hitoshi 92National Institute for Materials ScienceTsukuba/JP

ZZagrtdenov, Nail 48Géosciences Environnement Toulouse (GET)Toulouse/FR

Zakharov, Boris 47, 79, 99Russian Academy of Sciences, Novosibirsk/RU

Zaug, Joseph M. 40, 43, 55, 57, 62Lawrence Livermore National LaboratoryLivermore, CA/US

Zehnder, BeatSITEC-Sieber Engineering AG, Maur/CH

Zha, Changsheng 75Carnegie Institution for ScienceWashington D.C./US

Zimmer, Dominik 45Goethe University Frankfurt, Frankfurt a. M./DE PI-MTE

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Page 115: 4–9 September 2016

PI-MTE X-Ray Camera24/7 In-Vacuum Operation

Best-in-Class Cameras and Spectrometers

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Contact us to discuss your requirements!USA +1 609 631 4000

Germany: +49 (0) 89 660 779 3France: +33 1 60 86 03 65

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Page 116: 4–9 September 2016

General Information

116 Programme