Indentation onto Stishovite (SiO 2 ), MgO, and a Covered Superalloy: “Pop-In” Repair, Phase-Transition Onsets, Polymorph Energies, and Transition-Energies

The Berkovich indentation loading curves of the initially only extraterrestrial available polymorphs of SiO 2 are physically analyzed by applying the now well established F N -h 3/2 plots for conical/pyramidal indentations, in view of determining the phase-transition onset forces, indentation energies, and transition energies. Two phase-transitions of synthesized Stishovite yielding 2 polymorphs (one of them is Seifertite) with these properties are characterized. A third post-Stishovite polymorph is safely projected for higher load indentation. Both of them are now available at room temperature on earth for further investigation and the projected third of them is waiting. The published “pop-ins” had to be removed by self-evident repair of the force-depth curve. The meaning of published “pop-ins” is elucidated, apparently for the first time. The reasons for them and their avoidance are manifold. They are not materials’ properties but mechanical artefacts. Published pop-ins are not at all connected to phase-transitions, despite theoretical considerations claiming elastic-plastic conversion at the start of “pop-ins”. Spherical indentation analyses before them are obsolete. Final support is inter alia that one of the two new MgO twinning transitions is within a published “pop-in excursion”. The putting of a pop-in arrow at smooth loading curve without discontinuities is criticized, as the transfer between chemically different phases is neither phase transition nor “pop-in”. The polymorph’s onset forces, their energies and their endo- for e.g. airplanes, turbines, etc. Breakage and catastrophic cracks are more easily initiated at polymorph interfaces, the onset and transition energies must be above the highest possible mechanical and thermal stress for their being safe.


Introduction
Extraterrestrial materials such as high energy polymorphs of quartz were at first detected in meteorites from Mars and later collected from Moon. These crystalline materials are tetragonal Stishovite and later also the post-Stishovite polymorphs that are orthorhombic Seifertite, and the monoclinic quartz variety. All three are metastable at room temperature. Stishovite is now also found in atomic explosion craters and world-wide in ultrahigh pressure metamorphism rocks, or even in some diamonds. High-pressure-high-temperature syntheses are now successful in crystallizing sufficiently large single crystals of Stishovite, and Seifertite has also been obtained. They are yet the second hardest oxides. The indentation of Stishovite is of particular interest, as indentations of α-quartz undergo exothermic phase-transition into an amorphous phase but not endothermic into crystalline Coesite, another high pressure polymorph of SiO 2 . Apart from amorphous phases one could expect exothermic formation of Coesite or endothermic Seifertite and the monoclinic variety from Stishovite. A still higher post-Stishovite polymorph's transition energy will be expected. Two microindentations with Berkovich diamond indenters have been reported. One of them reports three small pop-ins and the other one very late broad "pop-in". But smooth loading curves are necessary before physical (not iterative fitting) analyses are enabled for phase-transition onsets (depth and load), indentation work (W indent ), applied work (W applied ), and transition energy (W trans ). Such endeavor requires correct calculation, excluding rounding errors with the already long available simple closed formulas. Iterations converging to a false exponent on the depth h and the inexcusable violation of the energy law must be avoided.
Rethinking of the "pop-in's" meaning and their removal or avoidance removes the still most complicated common misinterpretations.
Phase-transitions are revealed from physically analyzed [1] smooth force-depth curves of conical-pyramidal indentations not involving "pop-ins". The differences in the penetration resistances of the formed polymorphs provide sharp unsteadiness in the normal force vs. depth 3/2 plots (F N vs h 3/2 ). Some still iterating opponents have disdainfully been calling it "Kaupp-plot" but we will take it up now respectfully. The Kaupp-plot gives the penetration resistance k with dimen-G. Kaupp sion [N/m 3/2 ] as physical hardness. It is the slope from conical, pyramidal, and wedged indentations [1]. It will be shown for the first time that "pop-in" is unintended autonomous force hold, while indentation depth values are falsely extrapolated and not corrected upon force resumption. There are several reasons for the avoidable show-up of "pop-ins". Frequent speculation in the literature still claims their being essential for elastic to plastic conversions of materials, which are however not phase-transitions [1]. Particular striking misuses of the "pop-in" term are arrows labeled "pop-in" that point to smooth loading curve sites where there is none. Furthermore, one must not use the Kaupp-plot (F N vs. h 3/2 ) [1] without prior removal of published "pop-ins" (e.g. [2]), and beware of using it for spherical indentations. These are not simply parabolic. Only the Kaupp-plot reveals phase-transitions with their onsets and energies. That is easy, fast, and reliable. Phase-transitions have only rarely been guessed by "pop-outs" that require particular unloading techniques for confirming spectroscopic or electric results from e.g. hydrostatic pressure experiments. Almost all actually occurring phase-transitions remain unknown, if the physical Kaupp-plot analysis [1] is avoided for historical reasons. This proved already extremely dangerous, as polymorph interfaces upon phase-transition are nucleation sites for initially small cracks that upon further force produce catastrophic cracking for example in airliners [3] [4] [5]. Remedy is indispensable for e.g. the titanium alloys of propeller blades that should be improved in composition or replaced by other improved superalloys in airliners. Their phase-transition onsets and endothermic phase-transition energies must be far beyond the maximal forces that occur during turbulent flight. After the author's complaints in [4] [5] that phase-transition under load facilitates catastrophic cracking of titanium alloys, there is now a response. The chosen faster "remedy" is apparently not replacement of the alloy by a better one. It is now the placing of devices in front of the airliners' turbine propellers for impeding rotating broken off propeller blades from exiting at their higher speed in forward direction and shortly thereafter hit penetrating at the fuselage. This paper puts forward the physical analyses of widespread Berkovich indentations for clarifying erroneous reports in the literature on the basis of common calculation rules, but not iterations with up to 3 + 8 free parameters. It disproves the unfortunately continued toleration of the ISO (International Standardization Organization) violation of the energy law, which impedes to even think of phase-transitions, not to speak of their detecting by the F N vs. h 3/2 curve. This paper exemplifies the new application possibilities (the phase-transition activation energy requires temperature-dependent indentations). It analyzes the indentation onto Stishovite (SiO 2 ), magnesium oxide, and a covered superalloy. It requires only the physical loading curve analysis for obtaining the phase-transition onset and its energy. The calculation uses basic algebraic calculation rules but no iterations for the secure use of existing and advanced materials. The ease of the indispensable physical analysis of indentations is particularly favorable. Also the necessity for precise direct calibrations will be stressed. Unfortunately, the ISO "standards" that were obtained with false force calibration, materials' mix-up, inconsideration of the phase-transitions, and excessive multi-parameter iterations (as revealed in [5]) are unacceptable. But fortunately, these standards are not required at all. Only the absolute force and depth calibrations and the proper execution prescription of the indentation experiment are essential. That part of the calibration and its reliability is apparently in good hands at ISO or at the instrument builders, as shown by the successful physical analyses. Any occurring false calibration of instruments is fortunately immediately recognized, when experimental data do not concur with the undeniable general algebraic formulas. Examples are poor force linearity at higher loads or defective indenter tips, or manipulated published data, or iterated and fitted curves. Any false reports facilitate disastrous results when checks of their content are omitted. False experiments require repetition. Advanced materials require the use of indentations with physical analysis with all of the new possibilities for their characterization. This is exemplified in this paper.

Materials and Methods
When force vs depth indentation curves from the literature were analyzed for phase-transitions, all published "pop-in excursions" were removed and the falsely extrapolated depth readings were subtracted for joining the depths from before and after the shown-up distortion. A continuous smooth loading curve was obtained by joining the loading parts that were interrupted by the force hold. This self-evident repair (Section 3.1) enabled the physical analysis with the Kaupp-plot. The k-values (penetration resistances = physical hardness) were not affected by the repair, whatever the reasons for the "pop-in" might be because creep errors were by far too small. The original data-point pairs were taken from the printed figures that were enlarged to abscissa lengths of 15 to 20 cm for that purpose. They were directly loaded to Excel ® for the calculation of Figure 1 through Figure 3 and listed in Table 1. The calculations according to the already repeatedly published short and easily proved equations (numbers 3 -7 in [5]) must not be repeated here. Due to high sensitivity and for avoiding rounding errors, all values throughout were calculated with 10 significant figures, for reasonable rounding in Table 1 and at the final results in the text. Due to its energy law violation of the mostly used "P" for the normally applied force we use F N that is 0.8 P. The factor 0.8 is inherent in F N for being compatible with the energy law. This avoids a complication of formulas. 0.2 F N is the universal requirement for the elastic + plastic work of conical, pyramidal and wedged indentations [5].

"Pop-Ins": Appearance, Significance, Handling
So called "pop-ins" disturb the force-depth loading curves of indentations. If these appear, more careful repetition of the indentation experiment is required, or repair of the printed curve from a publication becomes necessary, prior to looking for the physical force-depth and energetic relations. At every "pop-in" production, the indenter electronics go autonomously in a force hold-mode, while the penetration loop continues in a pseudo creep mode with falsely reporting somehow extrapolated "fake depth" readings (not creep depression) until resumption of the loading loop, when too deep penetration depth value readings continue. The joining together of the loading parts requires subtraction of the "fake-values". Such correction must be manually executed, as there is no automatic correction when the force loop autonomously resumes after some time. It is hard to understand why that was not seen before. The real depth is the same at both ends of the horizontal "pop-in", notwithstanding some minimal creep that is often too small for being corrected, due to the short and comparably low constant-force action. Autonomous force holding ("pop-in") is a purely instrumental error. Unfortunately, common practices still continue to concede the pop-ins a physical significance (elastic to plastic conversion) that must be urgently challenged now. For example, pop-ins have nothing in common with the onset of "a sudden and strictly plastic punching" and it is not "an entirely plastic deformation process" [6]. Correspondingly, it has been claimed that "the onset of full plastic yielding at the indenter site is to be marked at the pop-in point" or that the "Hertzian elastic stress" ends at the pop-in [7]. Other distortions of the force control can be roughness, e.g. when the descending indenter tip hits with its skew sides or edges to a terrace step or other obstacle, or when it falls into a micro-hole. These events might sufficiently arrest the very sensitive constant force increase loop. It takes thereupon some time for autonomously resuming the force loop. Remedy is repetition of the experiment at a different site of the sample, or at another time, or at a larger distance from previous impressions or sample edges. The suggested distance of 10-fold indentation width should better be 20-fold [3]. Loading curves without pop-ins are achieved when following these hints.
Nevertheless, published pop-ins have continuously been interpreted as a purely elastic to plastic conversion, even though such published pop-ins started at different forces, often occurred multiply within the same indent, and varied considerably in their time for resumption. The elastic to plastic conversion does not change at such event and that is physically proved [1]. Furthermore, the "cone-point" {h cone = R (1 − sinα), where R is apical radius and α half-angle} is much smaller than the start of the shown-up pop-in with common Berkovich indenters (α = 70.3˚), and spherical indentation is not simply paraboloid. Exam-ples for such errors are manifold in the literature. Most intriguing are claims of "pop-ins" when these are not present in the smooth F N vs h curves. Some authors even try to misuse the term "pop-in" by inserting an arrow with such label at the smooth Berkovich loading curve. And that is tried to justify with the disproved "Hertzian theory" for spheres. For example the authors of [8] try to support their false belief with a large tip radius R. By using the iterative ISO 14577 techniques for the iteration of their tip end-radius they used a fused quartz indentation and both 3 + 8 free parameter iterations for comparison with equally treated and fixed standards. But they did not consider the numerous challenging reports telling that such "calibration" leads to far too high values, when compared with direct tapping-mode AFM measurements. The published iterated "tip radius" in [8] amounts to 269 nm. Such rounding would indicate an effective cone height of 15.75 nm for a Berkovich, which is almost the same as the kink position of the Kaupp-plot in [9]. The authors of [8] assumed elastic to plastic conversion at 15.9 nm depth for their Al-covered Ni-based superalloy diffusion zone and used a so-called "Hertzian approach", falsely believing in a spherical indentation up to this point. However, as already told above, spherical indentations do not proceed with a simple parabola [9]. The rightfully found parabola with exponent 3/2 is the result of conical/pyramidal behavior [1]. The iterated tip rounding of 269 nm is thus disproved and the tried application of the "Hertzian approach" is obsolete. In fact, elastic work and all kinds of plastic work relate in the same way to force and energy [1]. The historical views are unphysical and a half-sphere indentation (calotte before the cone-point) would require the non-parabola F N = kπ (R/h − 1/3) h 3/2 [9]. Nevertheless, the authors of [8] put an arrow labeled with "pop-in" at their smooth loading curve where there was none. One cannot better manifest the widespread false unphysical belief than by putting a "pop-in arrow" to a smooth curve in the absence of any pop-in! Clearly, our physical analysis with the Kaupp-plot of the smooth Al-covered Ni-superalloy loading curve reveals a very minor initial surface effect and two straight lines before and after the kink position (both with R = 0.9999 regression) in Figure 1. That is evidence for h 3/2 parabola loading curves. This proves pyramidal (effective conical) behavior. The not spherical behavior before the kink has already graphically been shown in [9]. The Berkovich of [8] must have been sharp (commonly 50 -100 nm) [9]. Only the correct analysis of such published curves of [8] is valid. The kink at 15.4 nm and 252 µN force does not indicate an elastic to plastic conversion and neither so a phase-transition. It clearly characterizes the crossing over two chemically different phases. This corrects the previous interpretation of the kink in Figure 1 as a sphere to effective cone conversion in [10] when the physical analysis of spherical indentations in [9] was not yet available and the "Hertzian" parabola for spheres appeared still credible.
Unfortunately, the widespread misuse of the pop-in term in connection with iterative analyses is still widely used. That's very dangerous, when used for technical materials under mechanical load.

Stishovite, Seifertite and Monoclinic Polymorph of SiO 2
Stishovite is tetragonal SiO 2 , with Rutil-type space group (P4 2 /mnm). It is named after Sergey H. Stishov, Russia, for its first synthesis from α-quartz (density of 2.65 g/cm 3 ) at 20 GPa and 1100˚C [11]. A more recent synthesis treated fused quartz at 20 GPa and 1100˚C [12]. It is one of the densest (4.287 g/cm 3 ) polymorphs known from SiO 2 [13]. It had first been found together with Coesite in meteors from Mars and later collected from Moon [14], or from atomic bomb explosion craters, in some diamonds and now in ultrahigh pressure metamorphism rocks around the Globe.
Orthorhombic Seifertite (Pbcn) with unusual six-fold Si-O coordination (named after Friedrich Seifert, Bayreuth, Germany), was described in [13]. 3 years later, space group Pbcn or Pb2n and 4.29 g/cm 3 were discussed by [15], and it was synthesized in 2013 (see below). A monoclinic post-Stishovite was identified together with Seifertite (not orthorhombic Pca2 1 , but monoclinic P2 1 /c) was identified by [14] [16] in the Martian Shergotty meteorite. All of them are metastable at ambient conditions. It appears intelligible, that the first phase-transition of Stishovite proceeds to Seifertite with still higher density and again with the unusual 6-fold coordination of the silicon atoms. The first hint for a second phase-transition from Stishovite leads to the structurally identified P2 1 c polymorph again with six-fold coordination and the density of 4.30 g/cm 3 .
The energetic sequence of these is not certain. The minor density differences cannot secure the chosen sequence that awaits structural characterization by indentation with synchrotron X-ray analysis close to the indented Berkovich, or (less reliable) calculations of the energy and suppressiveness. It appears impossible that the about 15 known further crystalline polymorphs (known αand ß-forms are counted) at much lower density (1.7 to 2.62 g/cm 3 ) and fourfold coordination could have been formed upon indentation of Stishovite. However a caveat remains, because 8 highest-pressure polymorphous structures of silica are listed with references in the Review [14] as CaF 2 , Fe 2 N, α-PbO 2 , I2/a, CaCl 2 , Pa-3, GeO 2 , TiO 2 structures. These structures have been obtained by hydrostatic pres-surizing or theoretical calculations, but some of them might only exist under high pressure. The orthogonal CaCl 2 -typ ( Pnnm) was found by a second order transition of Stishovite [17] [18] by hydrostatic pressure in a diamond anvil, but it is not quenchable and immediate first order transitions occur around 45 GPa. An inhomogenity at nearly hydrostatic pressure change in the rather gradual Raman frequency shift has been interpreted to occur from the TiO 2 -structure into the non-quenchable CaCl 2 structure at 27˚C [18]. An earlier paper with (quasi) hydrostatic experiments reported evidence for the CaCl 2 -structure of a post-Stishovite polymorph by synchrotron X-ray experiments. But only one phase-transition above Stishovite was found [19].
The situation changed with the detection of the quenchable Seifertite and P2 1 /c polymorphs. Seifertite could be synthesized from Cristobalite at 20 GPa and 900˚C [20]. Here we will rely on "quenchable" crystalline polymorph structures. The unloading curves [21] have smooth shapes, and the fast strain rate of the indentations with sharp onset would disfavor the possible CaCl 2 structure under these conditions and favor Seifertite and P2 1 c polymorphs. Indentations should be a useful tool for the formation and energetics of post-Stishovite polymorphs and the transition energies. Also the formation of still higher pressure polymorphs at room temperature can be envisaged.

The Indentation onto Stishovite
Indentations and hydrostatic compressions detect the polymorphs as they exist under pressure, and they include unquenchable (pressure-less not metastable) polymorphs. Both techniques can be performed at various temperatures. Only indentation is useful for the calculation of the important phase-transfer activation energies [22] [23], but temperature dependent indentations of Stishovite wait for their execution. Both techniques have been used for structural analysis with highly focused synchrotron X-ray analysis. The much slower hydrostatic pressure increase allows for equilibrations and the structural elucidation with X-ray analyses under pressure is easier also with various spectroscopic analyses. Raman spectroscopy has also been used with indentations. Syntheses with fast quenching (temperature and pressure) obtain only the quenchable polymorphs. Either indentation or hydrostatic pressing alone cannot distinguish all useful qualities.

The Indentation of Stishovite: Indentation Work and Transition Energies for 2 Post-Stishovites Despite 3 Published Pop-Ins
The Berkovich indentation onto (110) of a synthesized Stishovite single crystal [21] provided a loading curve with three short pop-ins at 0.98 mN (with 25.80 nm), at 8.53 mN (with 104.49 nm), and at 18.58 mN (with 160.13 nm) force (with depth). They are 1.0, 0.5, and 2.7 nm wide, respectively. However [21] deals only with the first of its 3 published pop-ins. Only the repaired published loading curve could be physically analyzed. The Kaupp-plot reveals a short (<40 nm) initial surface effect (including tip rounding) and two phase-transitions, in-  (Table 1) and a third one would be at a  third kink as expected for an indentation at higher load. At the first kink we have #1 and #2 and at the second #2 and #3 polymorphs. The #3 polymorph compression proceeds towards a firmly predicted #4 polymorph that is however not reached at a higher force kink point, due to the cut off of the indentation load. 22.5 mN is not very high for microindentation. The regression line equations are used for the calculation of indentation work W indent and transformation energies W trans . These results and their normalized values are listed in Table 1.
The phase-transition onsets are clearly seen and marked at the sharp though shallow kinks in Figure 2. All transitions are endothermic and a projected third post-Stishovite is not reached due to the cupping of the indentation force. The phase-transition onset forces do not closely correlate with the transition energies. But what are the structures of these post-Stishovite polymorphs? More answers are provided by the calculated indentation work W indent and the also calculated transformation energies W trans that have been arithmetically calculated without iterations and without requiring the common energy-law violations of ISO-standards [22].
One has to distinguish indentation work W indent , applied work W applied , and transition energy W trans . Before calculations, the published loading curves must be repaired from any pop-ins by removing such instrumental hold-periods with adjustment of the depth readings. Only required are the well-known formulas, as repeatedly published in [4] (their formulas 3 -7). These correct for surface effects (axis cut F a ) of the physically analyzed loading curves. They calculate from the phase-transition onsets the balance of full W applied − ΣW applied of the involved
The general calculation sequence is clear from Table 1. One obtains W applied1 from the triangle 0-F Nkink1 -depth h. The W applied2 requires integration of the loading curve for the corresponding range to obtain the W indent2 values that are multiplied with 1.25 to get the W applied2 values. Their corresponding sum and the full W applied value are obtained as for the W applied1 with the corresponding triangles. The balance is obtained by subtraction (full W applied − ΣW applied ) to obtain the W trans values that are normalized by division through the corresponding force ranges. The W indent values are not listed for space reasons, because they are easily obtained as 0.8 W applied [22]. The normalized W indent /mN values show the energy differences of the three polymorphs. It decreases from Stishovite#1 to #2 and #3. Conversely, there is much increase in the required phase-transition work the higher the energy of the polymorph. Such energetic properties are not available by other techniques and should be an empiric basis for the test of quantum mechanical calculations.
It is also seen in Table 1, that both phase-transitions of Stishovite (describing the three polymorphs) are highly endothermic and that the normalized transformation energies here with respect to the transition onset force are increasingly high. Every one of the three polymorphs has its particular quality that is increasing with the normal force and thus pressure. The normalized transition energy values W trans per mN of Stishovite are independent of the length of their stability ranges (the last one is cut off).
We can now ask, whether the proposed sequence of #2 before #3 is correct. The in Section 3.2 described quenchable orthorhombic Seifertite (Pbcn; 4.303 g/cm 3 ) is the first guess for #2 in Table 1. The second guess for #3 is the also quenchable monoclinic polymorph (P2 1 /c; 4.30(2) g/cm 3 ) [16]. The reported densities are too close for deciding which one should be #2 or #3 in Table 1. And there is the possibility for as yet unknown unquenchable post-Stishovite polymorphs. A safe answer to these questions can only provide the onsite indentation at a synchrotron with highly focussed X-ray analyses. It is however certain that both of these endothermic formed polymorphs maintain the six-coordination of the silicon atoms. This excludes all of the numerous lower energy polymorphs with four-coordination to the silicon atoms. However, their transition energy contents are rather large in Table 1 and that should be helpful for decisions by calculations, as long as the synchrotron studies are lacking. The multitude of proposed structures is described in Section 3.2. Further indentation experiments with higher loads than 25 mN are advisable for finding still higher polymorphs of SiO 2 . The big advantage of indentation is the energetic characterization that is only possible with this technique. The reason why (post)Stishovite does not exothermic react to give the 4-fold coordination of Coesite etc, or α-quartz that transforms exothermally to an amorphous phase with k 1 = 2.5443 and k 2 = 1.8609 µN/nm 3/2 [5] is their enormous density due to 6-fold coordination of Si. That makes any internal expansion difficult and prefers cooperative transitions with minimal internal movements by retaining the 6-fold coordination and retaining the high density.
This view is also supported by the very high penetration resistance values k from the Kaupp-plot (the physical hardness) of 0.0086 to 0.0117 mN/nm 3/2 ( Figure 2). These values reach and surmount the ones of superalloys [4].

The Stishovite Indentation with Published Broad Late Pop-In
It appears of course appropriate to compare the indentation of Section 3.3.1 with the 3 years older indentation, again onto (110) of Stishovite, and again with a Berkovich indenter. Smaller polycrystalline Stishovite grains (50 -200 µm wide) were used and the results "should be regarded as for single crystals" [24]. These authors published one late large "pop-in" (20 nm wide) starting at 14 mN load and 128 nm depth. After the repair of the loading curve, the Kaupp plot revealed again two phase-transitions very close to the ones in Section 3. to +12%. All of that points to a calibration problem of the unspecified indentation instrument due to the iterative ISO 14577 calibration [25]. An "error of ±5% for the calibration" has been claimed. As the precise conditions are not reported in [24] (e.g. sample purity, origin of instrument, compliance correction, calibration of force and depth), we refrain from the energetic calculations but rely on the apparently better defined measurements: In [21] the tip radius was measured with tapping mode AFM, the single crystal was larger, the distances between the several impressions were 20 instead of only 10 μm, and the tests were at constant strain-rate of 0.05/s. Instrument calibrations should be direct but not indirect by using ISO 14577 standards that were obtained by two consecutive iterations the first with 3 and the second with 8 free parameters [25]. And there were experimental errors at the force linearity and severe mix-up of standard materials in [25], as revealed in [5].
It is again very clear that the removal of the pop-ins from published loading curves works well, whatever their appearance might be. They might be absent, broad, or multiply narrow, early, later, and very late.

The Published Huge "Pop-In" of Periclase MgO.
While the behavior of the highly energetic and rarely available metastable materials in Section 3.3.with unusually high six-coordination to silicon atoms might appear somewhat special, one has to check at least one indentation of a normal stable material with pop-in accordingly. For example, the names Periclase for the MgO mineral (NaCl-type structure) already denotes easy cleavage all around its crystal, which can be a weak point for cracking and for pop-in production. Nevertheless, the B1 into B2 phase-transition of MgO upon hydrostatic pressure occurs between very high pressures of 429 and 562 GPa at room temperature or at much higher temperatures [26]. One could therefore not safely expect a phase-transition by a Berkovich micro-indentation onto magnesium oxide. However the reported terraces on its indented freshly cleaved (100) plane should increase the probability for pop-in production when the descending tip hits a terrace step with its skew side or edge. This has already been pointed out in Section 3.1. Micro-cracking upon Periclase indentation far from the tip edges could be excluded, as there was none of the short depressive spikes in the smooth loading curve, which are known from [3]. The authors of [6] called their published pop-in at 9.501 mN from 75 -125 nm a "kind of accident" at the conversion from "elastic deformation" to "elasto-plastic behavior". The comparison with an indentation of Al without pop-in in [6] is misleading: there were no terraces on it. The published loading curve of MgO required therefore its elucidation. A smooth loading curve was obtained for the physical analysis after removing the published pop-in and the corresponding correction of the penetration values. Following an initial surface effect up to <30 nm depth, the Kaupp-plot from the so repaired smooth loading curve with its regression lines can now obtain the kink positions by equalizing the corresponding regression G. Kaupp lines (the initial effects including tip rounding are of course not part of the regression). The first exothermic phase-transition is at 99.299 nm. It is marked with the first vertical line in Figure 3. This is the depth-corrected position within the now removed autonomous decoupled instrumental hold period. Therefore, the phase-transition force of 13.886 mN is above the previous hold-force (9. 501 mN) of the removed pop-in, as expected. Clearly, the phase-transition did neither occur at the start of the published pop-in, nor at its end. The regression lines cover data points from before and from after the force-hold-period. This observation proves: the published pop-in did not at all influence the exothermic phase-transition onset. This is an especially lucky feature. It undoubtedly confirms the new recognition of the missing significance of "pop-ins" that must be avoided or removed. It certifies the undisturbed calculation of the indentation works and the transition energies despite published pop-ins. Published loading curves with "pop-ins" must indeed be repaired for any physical analysis both for exothermic and endothermic phase-transitions (Table 1).
Our process is highly precise. While the plot from the first kink (first vertical line) to the end point might be judged uniformly (this would correlate with R 2 = 0.9996). However, the differently drawn data points of the Excel calculation indicate another very shallow kink of two regression lines (not drawn) that correlate with R 2 = 0.9998 and 0.9997, respectively. The physical analysis thus reveals three polymorphs up to at least 76 mN load. The first transition produces exothermic the first post-MgO polymorph. And this polymorph produces at higher force exothermic the second post-MgO polymorph. A projected third post-MgO kink is not reached due to the cupped off indentation force. The transition energies are listed in Table 1. The energetic data were again arithmetically calculated with the well-known closed formulas in [3] [5].
For the structures of post-MgO polymorphs we have to consider that an early B1 (NaCl type) to B2 (CsCl type) structural transformation of MgO at 13.9 and up  (Table 1) is not imaginable in view of the required super-high hydrostatic pressure for this phase-transition [26]. The early transition onset of the first transition should therefore only reach a first twinned MgO, requiring the high mechanical stress due to high crystal energy of B1-MgO (3795 kJ/mol [27]) and that the first MgO-twin upon further stress transforms exothermic to a different second twin, which is stable to more than 67 mN load at the cut-off. Further post-MgO polymorphs require higher load indentations.
Supporting evidence for these conclusions are the synthesized MgO-twins by epitaxial pulsed laser deposition from (111) faces in [111] direction [28] or by sintering of MgO (m.p. 2800˚C), at 2200-2300˚C into a structurally known monoclinic MgO-twin (a 6.443, b 5.9385, c 5.699, ß 91˚16') [29]. Two different deformation twins of MgO from {110} to [110] and from {111} to [112] slip systems have also been calculated [30]. This can provide a hint for the energetic sequence of the ones from micro-indentation in Table 1

Conclusions
This paper reports two phase-transitions, each of micro indentation loading G. Kaupp curves from the metastable Stishovite and from magnesium oxide. The projected third post-Stishovite and the projected third post-MgO are not reached due to the cupped indentation forces, but the way to them has been paved. These further polymorphs are firmly predicted for indentations up to higher loads. The published "pop-ins" within the loading curves had to be removed. The here described repair technique is highly important for the physical use of important published force vs. depth curves onto extremely precious materials, such as a good single crystal of Stishovite. Autonomous force holding ("pop-in") is a purely instrumental distortion. In the case of an Al-coated Ni-superalloy "diffusion zone" there is not a phase-transition but the crossing over two chemically different phases. It occurred without a published "pop-in", despite such strangest claim. Also in that case the widespread false belief on elastic-plastic conversion with "pop-in" had to be challenged. Unfortunately, the widespread belief in This paper also points out that the correct calibration of the indentation equipment is important for correct numerical results. Secondary calibrations with the ISO 1457 standards are unsuitable, because of the mix-up of materials that occurred upon their generation with poor force calibration, inconsideration of their phase-transitions and iterations with at first 3 and then 8 free parameters, as revealed in [5] by checks with the Kaupp-plot. Such standards cannot be accepted for physical calibrations. But materials' standards are not necessary for the absolute physical analyses. ISO, instrument suppliers and certification agencies are required to use and enforce primary direct calibrations of the indenter instruments.
The two structurally known meteorite post-Stishovite polymorphs Seifertite and the monoclinic post-Stishovite can now easily be prepared for further investigation by microindentations onto Stishovite. Higher energy post-Stishovite polymorphs' onsets and energies are safely expected by higher force micro-indentation, and if necessary by depth sensing macro-indentation. The single crystal that has been used for Figure 2 was already large enough for indentations at higher load micro-or macro-indentation above 25 mN. Also the B1 to B2 phase-transition onset and energies of MgO await further indentations at higher well calibrated loads.
It will be important for earth sub mantel explorations to indent all of the mayor minerals occurring in the lower earth mantle and study their high and highest energy phase-transition onsets and energies also temperature dependently. This will lead to a better understanding of the earth crust with its tectonic properties and influences. It will also be important to study all old and advanced technical and constructional materials for phase-transition onsets and energies to help avoiding catastrophic crashes of e.g. airliners, all types of fast running propellers, turbines, bridges, buildings, commodities, etc. Cracking is facilitated at polymorph interfaces. Their mechanical and thermal stress must be well below their as yet unknown phase transition onsets. As these remained undetermined for historical reasons they have now to be elucidated by physical indentation.

Outlook
For the future, it will be important that industry shall be enabled to use the here described results and physical analysis techniques for the correction of false characterizations of technically important materials and for producing physically correct results. To reach that goal, the independent academic teachers must abandon their very complicated historical thinking and teaching that prevents them from disagreeing with the striking energy violation of ISO. As universally deduced in [22], the violation is 20% for the correct loading exponent 3/2 on h-or it calculates to 33.33% upon use of the incorrect exponent 2 on h-of the undeniable pressure work. It cannot be created workless from nothing! However ISO 14577 still enforces to believe that all applied force is used for the penetration. ISO calls the normal force "P", which in fact means 1.25 F N (see Section 2).
This severe violation of the energy law is responsible for prescribing the false exponent 2 on h for cones and pyramids, which impedes phase-transition detections with their onsets and energies. It also falsifies dimension and value of ISO G. Kaupp hardness, the values of ISO modulus, and the numerous mechanical parameters that are deduced from them. This must no longer be taught in classes for students and should help for complaints against ISO 14577 and also against handbooks of the indentation equipment suppliers. Such complaints shall be directly addressed towards ISO 14577 agents in addition to the present author who continues with direct complaining at ISO in Germany. It is certainly a difficult task for worldwide ISO to thoroughly modernize their 14577-Standards for complying with the physical basis at the expense of historical belief against elementary physics. Physically sound standards are indispensable for the instruction of the certification agencies, (between agencies and for) for their requiring this states-of-the-art upon the certification of the producing industries. The latter are of course bound to their certification documents and cannot act against them. Also instrument builders must change their handbooks and provide the physical calculation routines for the physical characterization techniques and extensions to the before not even thinkable applications. This will not only increase the value of the indentation techniques, but it is a requirement for daily safety to produce physically correct data. In the meantime independent researches are urged to use the here presented and cited new physical possibilities and publish their data on phase-transition onsets and energies. That includes the here not addressed temperature dependent indentations for the activation energies of phase-transitions. After all, liability problems cannot be excused with disproved historical beliefs.

Conflicts of Interest
The author declares no conflicts of interest regarding the publication of this paper.