Far-Infrared Spectra of the Ices
- 1 November 1968
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Applied Spectroscopy
- Vol. 22 (6) , 634-640
- https://doi.org/10.1366/000370268774384164
Abstract
Over the past few years the ir spectra of six of the nine known phases of ice have been studied between 4000 and about 50 cm−1. These spectra show the influence of six different intermolecular environments upon the spectra of the same molecule. In this paper the far-ir spectra of ices 1h and 1c will be reviewed and compared with those of ices II, V, VI, and IX, which are discussed in detail for the first time. The far-ir absorptions arise from the translational lattice vibrations of the solid. The spectra of the orientationally disordered phases, 1h, 1c, V, and VI differ strikingly from those of the ordered phases, II and IX. The ordered phases have spectra that are qualitatively similar to the spectra of nonhydrogenbonded ordered molecular crystals, and agree approximately with the predictions of the Factor Group analyses. The disordered phases all shown extremely broad absorptions owing to the relaxation of the zero-wavevector selection rule.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Optical Spectra of Orientationally Disordered Crystals. II. Infrared Spectrum of Ice Ih and Ice Ic from 360 to 50 cm−1The Journal of Chemical Physics, 1967
- Optical Spectra of Orientationally Disordered Crystals. I. Theory for Translational Lattice VibrationsThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1967
- Structure of Ice VIScience, 1965
- Ice. II. A proton-ordered form of iceActa Crystallographica, 1964
- Infrared spectra by mulling techniques at liquid—nitrogen temperaturesSpectrochimica Acta, 1964
- TRANSFORMATIONS OF ICE VI AND ICE VII AT ATMOSPHERIC PRESSURECanadian Journal of Chemistry, 1964
- Infrared Spectra of Ices II, III, and V in the Range 4000 to 350 cm—1The Journal of Chemical Physics, 1964
- The structure of iceProceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A. Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 1958
- A single-crystal neutron diffraction study of heavy iceActa Crystallographica, 1957
- The Structure and Entropy of Ice and of Other Crystals with Some Randomness of Atomic ArrangementJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1935