Extreme experiments on perovskite may offer insight into Earth's interior and deep earthquakes

Sadie Harley
scientific editor

Robert Egan
associate editor

Materials scientists at the University of California San Diego have performed powerful laser shock experiments on a perovskite mineral to better understand the geophysical processes in Earth's deep interior and the mechanisms behind earthquakes deep within the planet.
The study is published in .
Perovskites are a class of materials used in light-based technologies such as solar cells, LEDs and lasers. They are also the most abundant minerals in Earth's mantle. Two of the mantle's most abundant mineral perovskites, bridgmanite and wollastonite, are difficult to study directly because they are unstable under standard laboratory conditions.
To get around this, researchers use a chemically different but structurally similar mineral, calcium titanate, as an analog.
In a new study, researchers used high-power laser shock compression to recreate the extreme pressures and temperatures found deep inside Earth.
They discovered that calcium titanate deforms more like metals by forming dense networks of line and planar defects in contrast to completely disordered amorphization typically found in covalent materials like diamond—that may explain how mantle rocks respond to stress.
These findings provide new insights into the processes that drive deep-focus earthquakes, which occur hundreds of kilometers beneath Earth's surface, and may also inform the effects of meteorite impacts on planets.
More information: Boya Li et al, Plastic deformation of CaTiO3 perovskite under extreme loading, Acta Materialia (2025).
Journal information: Acta Materialia
Provided by University of California - San Diego