Effects of Oxygen and Water Vapor on the "OH" Absorption in Melt-Grown Alkali Halides
- 1 September 1962
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review B
- Vol. 127 (5) , 1564-1566
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrev.127.1564
Abstract
Single crystals of KCl and NaCl have been grown from the melt with several changes in the ambient atmosphere during the growth of each crystal. The effects of atmospheres of water vapor and oxygen separately and combined on the ultraviolet "OH" absorption band have been examined. In KCl it was found that water vapor and oxygen are separately ineffective but together produce a continuously increasing "OH" absorption. In NaCl the increase is induced by water vapor alone. For KCl the rate of crystal growth in oxygen is found to be more than twice the rate in argon.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Relation Between thermal Conductivity Defect in Sodium Chloride and Acoustic Relaxation Effects at Low TemperaturesPhysical Review Letters, 1961
- Optical Absorption and Fluorescence of Oxygen in Alkali Halide CrystalsPhysical Review B, 1961
- Phonon Scattering in Sodium Chloride Containing OxygenPhysical Review B, 1961
- On the Presence of NaOH in Crystalline NaClThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1960
- Optical Properties of Alkali Halides Containing Hydroxyl IonsPhysical Review B, 1958
- Hydroxide Absorption Band in Alkali Halide CrystalsPhysical Review Letters, 1958
- Production of Colloidal Sodium in NaCl by Ionizing RadiationPhysical Review B, 1957