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Fields & Applications Chemical

Hitler’s Acid in Uranus?

The core of Uranus could contain significant amounts of carbonic and orthocarbonic acid polymers, according to scientists at the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology (MIPT) and the Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology (Skoltech).

“The chemistry of the elements is heavily altered by high pressure, with stabilization of many new and often unexpected compounds, the emergence of which can profoundly change models of planetary interiors, where high pressure reigns,” write the authors (1). “The C-H-O system is one of the most important planet-forming systems, but its high-pressure chemistry is not well known.”

Using computer modeling, the team simulated the high-pressure conditions of planet interiors and discovered that when the pressure rises to 314 gigapascal, an exothermic reaction between water and carbonic acid results in the formation of orthocarbonic acid (H4CO4) – also known as “Hitler’s Acid” because of the molecular structure’s supposed resemblance to the infamous Nazi swastika.

USPEX (Universal Structure Predictor: Evolutionary Xtallography), the algorithm used by the team to carry out the analysis, was developed by Artem Oganov’s team (MIPT’s Computational Materials Discovery Lab) and has been used previously to analyze ‘forbidden’ substances that may be stable at high pressures.

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  1. G Saleh and A Oganov, “Novel Stable Compounds in the C-H-O Ternary System at High Pressure”, Sci. Rep, 6, (2016), DOI: 10.1038/srep32486
About the Author
Joanna Cummings

A former library manager and storyteller, I have wanted to write for magazines since I was six years old, when I used to make my own out of foolscap paper and sellotape and distribute them to my family. Since getting my MSc in Publishing, I’ve worked as a freelance writer and content creator for both digital and print, writing on subjects such as fashion, food, tourism, photography – and the history of Roman toilets. Now I can be found working on The Analytical Scientist, finding the ‘human angle’ to cutting-edge science stories.

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