ALBERT

All Library Books, journals and Electronic Records Telegrafenberg

feed icon rss

Ihre E-Mail wurde erfolgreich gesendet. Bitte prüfen Sie Ihren Maileingang.

Leider ist ein Fehler beim E-Mail-Versand aufgetreten. Bitte versuchen Sie es erneut.

Vorgang fortführen?

Exportieren
Filter
  • 2000-2004  (30.776)
  • 1940-1944  (1.548)
Sammlung
Sprache
Erscheinungszeitraum
Jahr
  • 1
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    Signatur: PIK N 531-02-0135
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: 475 p.
    Ausgabe: 1. ed.
    ISBN: 0521495350
    Standort: A 18 - Bitte bestellen
    Zweigbibliothek: PIK Bibliothek
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
    BibTip Andere fanden auch interessant ...
  • 2
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Washington, D.C. : Mineralogical Society of America
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: 11/M 01.0314
    In: Reviews in mineralogy & geochemistry
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: The first half-century of X-ray crystallography, beginning with the elucidation of the sodium chloride structure in 1914, was devoted principally to the determination of increasingly complex atomic topologies at ambient conditions. The pioneering work of the Braggs, Pauling, Wyckoff, Zachariasen and many other investigators revealed the structural details and underlying crystal chemical principles for most rock-forming minerals (see, for example, Crystallography in North America, edited by D. McLachlan and J. P. Glusker, NY, American Crystallographic Association, 1983). These studies laid the crystallographic foundation for modem mineralogy. The past three decades have seen a dramatic expansion of this traditional crystallographic role to the study of the relatively subtle variations of crystal structure as a function of temperature, pressure, or composition. Special sessions on "High temperature crystal chemistry" were first held at the Spring Meeting of the American Geophysical Union (April 19, 1972) and the Ninth International Congress of Crystallography (August 30, 1972). The Mineralogical Society of America subsequently published a special 11-paper section of American Mineralogist entitled "High Temperature Crystal Chemistry," which appeared as Volume 58, Numbers 5 and 6, Part I in July-August, 1973. The first complete three-dimensional structure refinements of minerals at high pressure were completed in the same year on calcite (Merrill and Bassett, Acta Crystallographica B31, 343-349, 1975) and on gillespite (Hazen and Burnham, American Mineralogist 59, 1166-1176, 1974). Rapid advances in the field of non-ambient crystallography prompted Hazen and Finger to prepare the monograph Comparative Crystal Chemistry: Temperature, Pressure, Composition and the Variation of Crystal Structure (New York: Wiley, 1982). At the time, only about 50 publications documenting the three-dimensional variation of crystal structures at high temperature or pressure had been published, though general crystal chemical trends were beginning to emerge. That work, though increasingly out of date, remained in print until recently as the only comprehensive overview of experimental techniques, data analysis, and results for this crystallographic sub-discipline. This Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry volume was conceived as an updated version of Comparative Crystal Chemistry. A preliminary chapter outline was drafted at the Fall 1998 American Geophysical Union meeting in San Francisco by Ross Angel, Robert Downs, Larry Finger, Robert Hazen, Charles Prewitt and Nancy Ross. In a sense, this volume was seen as a "changing of the guard" in the study of crystal structures at high temperature and pressure. Larry Finger retired from the Geophysical Laboratory in July, 1999, at which time Robert Hazen had shifted his research focus to mineral-mediated organic synthesis. Many other scientists, including most of the authors in this volume, are now advancing the field by expanding the available range of temperature and pressure, increasing the precision and accuracy of structural refinements at non-ambient conditions, and studying ever more complex structures. The principal objective of this volume is to serve as a comprehensive introduction to the field of high-temperature and high-pressure crystal chemistry, both as a guide to the dramatically improved techniques and as a summary of the voluminous crystal chemical literature on minerals at high temperature and pressure. The book is largely tutorial in style and presentation, though a basic knowledge of X-ray crystallographic techniques and crystal chemical principles is assumed. The book is divided into three parts. Part I introduces crystal chemical considerations of special relevance to non-ambient crystallographic studies. Chapter 1 treats systematic trends in the variation of structural parameters, including bond distances, cation coordination, and order-disorder with temperature and pressure, while Chapter 2 considers P-V-T equation-of-state formulations relevant to x-ray structure data. Chapter 3 reviews the variation of thermal displacement parameters with temperature and pressure. Chapter 4 describes a method for producing revealing movies of structural variations with pressure, temperature or composition, and features a series of "flip-book" animations. These animations and other structural movies are also available as a supplement to this volume on the Mineralogical Society of America web site at RiMG041 Programs. Part II reviews the temperature- and pressure-variation of structures in major mineral groups. Chapter 5 presents crystal chemical systematics of high-pressure silicate structures with six-coordinated silicon. Subsequent chapters highlight temperature- and pressure variations of dense oxides (Chapter 6), orthosilicates (Chapter 7), pyroxenes and other chain silicates (Chapter 8), framework and other rigid-mode structures (Chapter 9), and carbonates (Chapter 10). Finally, the variation of hydrous phases and hydrogen bonding are reviewed in Chapter 11, while molecular solids are summarized in Chapter 12. Part III presents experimental techniques for high-temperature and high-pressure studies of single crystals (Chapters 13 and 14, respectively) and polycrystalline samples (Chapter 15). Special considerations relating to diffractometry on samples at non-ambient conditions are treated in Chapter 16. Tables in these chapters list sources for relevant hardware, including commercially available furnaces and diamond-anvil cells. Crystallographic software packages, including diffractometer operating systems, have been placed on the Mineralogical Society web site for this volume. This volume is not exhaustive and opportunities exist for additional publications that review and summarize research on other mineral groups. A significant literature on the high-temperature and high-pressure structural variation of sulfides, for example, is not covered here. Also missing from this compilation are references to a variety of studies of halides, layered oxide superconductors, metal alloys, and a number of unusual silicate structures.
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: viii, 596 S.
    ISBN: 0-939950-53-7 , 978-0-939950-53-9
    ISSN: 1529-6466
    Serie: Reviews in mineralogy & geochemistry 41
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Anmerkung: Contents of Part I. p. vii - viii Part I: Characterization and Interpretation of Structural Variations with Temperature and Pressure Chapter 1. Principles of Comparative Crystal Chemistry by Robert M. Hazen, Robert T. Downs, and Charles T. Prewitt, p. 1 - 34 Chapter 2. Equations of State by Ross J. Angel, p. 35 - 60 Chapter 3. Analysis of Harmonic Displacement Factors by Robert T. Downs, p. 61 - 88 Chapter 4. Animation of Crystal Structure Variations with Pressure, Temperature and Composition by Robert T. Downs and P.J. Heese, p. 89 - 118 Part II: Variation of Structures with Temperature and Pressure Contents of Part II. p. 119 - 122 Chapter 5. Systematics of High-Pressure Silicate Structures by Larry W. Finger and Robert M. Hazen, p. 123 - 156 Chapter 6. Comparative Crystal Chemistry of Dense Oxide Minerals by Joseph R. Smyth, Steven D. Jacobsen, and Robert M. Hazen, p. 157 - 186 Chapter 7. Comparative Crystal Chemistry of Orthosilicate Minerals by Joseph R. Smyth, Steven D. Jacobsen, and Robert M. Hazen, p. 187 - 210 Chapter 8. Chain and Layer Silicates at High Temperatures and Pressures by Hexiong Yang and Charles T. Prewitt, p. 211 - 256 Chapter 9. Framework Structures by Nancy L. Ross, p. 257 - 288 Chapter 10. Structural Variations in Carbonates by Simon A.T. Redfern, p. 289 - 308 Chapter 11. Hydrous Phases and Hydrogen Bonding at High Pressure by Charles T. Prewitt and John B. Parise, p. 309 - 334 Chapter 12. Molecular Crystals by Russell J. Hemley and Przemyslaw Dera, p. 335 - 420 Part III: Experimental Techniques Contents of Part III. p. 421 - 424 Chapter 13. High-Temperature Devices and Environmental Cells for X-ray and Neutron Diffraction Experiments by Ronald C. Peterson and Hexiong Yang, p. 425 - 444 Chapter 14. High-Pressure Single-Crystal Techniques by Ronald Miletich, David R. Allan, and Werner F. Kuhs, p. 445 - 520 Chapter 15. High-Pressure and High-Temperature Powder Diffraction by Yingwei Fei and Yanbin Wang, p. 521 - 558 Chapter 16. High-Temperature­High-Pressure Diffractometry by Ross J. Angel, Robert T. Downs, and Larry W. Finger, p. 559 - 596
    Standort: Lesesaal
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
    BibTip Andere fanden auch interessant ...
  • 3
    Schriftenreihen ausleihbar
    Schriftenreihen ausleihbar
    Copenhagen : Det Kongelige Danske Videnskabernes Selskab
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: S 99.0487(50)
    In: Matematisk-fysiske meddelelser
    Materialart: Schriftenreihen ausleihbar
    Seiten: 61 S.
    ISBN: 8778763029
    Serie: Matematisk-fysiske Meddelelser 50
    Klassifikation:
    Regionale Geologie
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin unten
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
    BibTip Andere fanden auch interessant ...
  • 4
    Unbekannt
    Washington, DC : Mineralogical Society of America
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: The first half-century of X-ray crystallography, beginning with the elucidation of the sodium chloride structure in 1914, was devoted principally to the determination of increasingly complex atomic topologies at ambient conditions. The pioneering work of the Braggs, Pauling, Wyckoff, Zachariasen and many other investigators revealed the structural details and underlying crystal chemical principles for most rock-forming minerals (see, for example, Crystallography in North America, edited by D. McLachlan and J. P. Glusker, NY, American Crystallographic Association, 1983). These studies laid the crystallographic foundation for modem mineralogy. The past three decades have seen a dramatic expansion of this traditional crystallographic role to the study of the relatively subtle variations of crystal structure as a function of temperature, pressure, or composition. Special sessions on "High temperature crystal chemistry" were first held at the Spring Meeting of the American Geophysical Union (April 19, 1972) and the Ninth International Congress of Crystallography (August 30, 1972). The Mineralogical Society of America subsequently published a special 11-paper section of American Mineralogist entitled "High Temperature Crystal Chemistry," which appeared as Volume 58, Numbers 5 and 6, Part I in July-August, 1973. The first complete three-dimensional structure refinements of minerals at high pressure were completed in the same year on calcite (Merrill and Bassett, Acta Crystallographica B31, 343-349, 1975) and on gillespite (Hazen and Burnham, American Mineralogist 59, 1166-1176, 1974). Rapid advances in the field of non-ambient crystallography prompted Hazen and Finger to prepare the monograph Comparative Crystal Chemistry: Temperature, Pressure, Composition and the Variation of Crystal Structure (New York: Wiley, 1982). At the time, only about 50 publications documenting the three-dimensional variation of crystal structures at high temperature or pressure had been published, though general crystal chemical trends were beginning to emerge. That work, though increasingly out of date, remained in print until recently as the only comprehensive overview of experimental techniques, data analysis, and results for this crystallographic sub-discipline. This Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry volume was conceived as an updated version of Comparative Crystal Chemistry. A preliminary chapter outline was drafted at the Fall 1998 American Geophysical Union meeting in San Francisco by Ross Angel, Robert Downs, Larry Finger, Robert Hazen, Charles Prewitt and Nancy Ross. In a sense, this volume was seen as a "changing of the guard" in the study of crystal structures at high temperature and pressure. Larry Finger retired from the Geophysical Laboratory in July, 1999, at which time Robert Hazen had shifted his research focus to mineral-mediated organic synthesis. Many other scientists, including most of the authors in this volume, are now advancing the field by expanding the available range of temperature and pressure, increasing the precision and accuracy of structural refinements at non-ambient conditions, and studying ever more complex structures. The principal objective of this volume is to serve as a comprehensive introduction to the field of high-temperature and high-pressure crystal chemistry, both as a guide to the dramatically improved techniques and as a summary of the voluminous crystal chemical literature on minerals at high temperature and pressure. The book is largely tutorial in style and presentation, though a basic knowledge of X-ray crystallographic techniques and crystal chemical principles is assumed. The book is divided into three parts. Part I introduces crystal chemical considerations of special relevance to non-ambient crystallographic studies. Chapter 1 treats systematic trends in the variation of structural parameters, including bond distances, cation coordination, and order-disorder with temperature and pressure, while Chapter 2 considers P-V-T equation-of-state formulations relevant to x-ray structure data. Chapter 3 reviews the variation of thermal displacement parameters with temperature and pressure. Chapter 4 describes a method for producing revealing movies of structural variations with pressure, temperature or composition, and features a series of "flip-book" animations. These animations and other structural movies are also available as a supplement to this volume on the Mineralogical Society of America web site at (http://www.minsocam.orgIMSAlRimlRim41.html). Part II reviews the temperature- and pressure-variation of structures in major mineral groups. Chapter 5 presents crystal chemical systematics of high-pressure silicate structures with six-coordinated silicon. Subsequent chapters highlight temperature- and pressure variations of dense oxides (Chapter 6), orthosilicates (Chapter 7), pyroxenes and other chain silicates (Chapter 8), framework and other rigid-mode structures (Chapter 9), and carbonates (Chapter 10). Finally, the variation of hydrous phases and hydrogen bonding are reviewed in Chapter 11, while molecular solids are summarized in Chapter 12. Part III presents experimental techniques for high-temperature and high-pressure studies of single crystals (Chapters 13 and 14, respectively) and polycrystalline samples (Chapter 15). Special considerations relating to diffractometry on samples at non-ambient conditions are treated in Chapter 16. Tables in these chapters list sources for relevant hardware, including commercially available furnaces and diamond-anvil cells. Crystallographic software packages, including diffractometer operating systems, have been placed on the Mineralogical Society web site for this volume. This volume is not exhaustive and opportunities exist for additional publications that review and summarize research on other mineral groups. A significant literature on the high-temperature and high-pressure structural variation of sulfides, for example, is not covered here. Also missing from this compilation are references to a variety of studies of halides, layered oxide superconductors, metal alloys, and a number of unusual silicate structures.
    Seiten: Online-Ressource (IX, 597 Seiten)
    ISBN: 9780939950539
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
    BibTip Andere fanden auch interessant ...
  • 5
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge University Press
    Signatur: 5/M 10.0104
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: This book introduces geophysicists and geologists to the technique of interpreting 3-D seismic data. The topics it covers include basic structural interpretation and map-making; the use of 3-D visualization methods; interpretation of seismic amplitudes; the generation and use of AVO and acoustic impedance datasets; and time-lapse seismic mapping. Written by professional geophysicists with many years of working experience in the oil industry, the book will be indispensable for graduate students, researchers, and new entrants into the petroleum industry. Written by industry professionals with many years experience of working with seismic data. Suitable for advanced university courses as well as petroleum industry professionals wishing to learn about 3-D seismic interpretation.
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: X, 212 S. , Ill., graph. Darst., Kt.
    Ausgabe: 3rd print.
    ISBN: 9780521710664
    Klassifikation:
    Seismologie
    Standort: Lesesaal
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
    BibTip Andere fanden auch interessant ...
  • 6
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Missoula : Mountain Press Publ. Comp.
    Signatur: PIK N 430-10-0250
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: VIII, 295 S. : zahlr. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt.
    ISBN: 0878424180
    Standort: A 18 - Bitte bestellen
    Zweigbibliothek: PIK Bibliothek
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
    BibTip Andere fanden auch interessant ...
  • 7
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Oxford [u.a.] : Oxford University Press
    Signatur: PIK N 430-09-0230
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: XII, 242 S. : Ill., graph. Darst.
    ISBN: 0195105974
    Standort: A 18 - Bitte bestellen
    Zweigbibliothek: PIK Bibliothek
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
    BibTip Andere fanden auch interessant ...
  • 8
    Signatur: PIK N 531-11-0362
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: 180 S. : Ill., graph. Darst., Kt.
    ISBN: 3900865175
    Serie: Forstliche Schriftenreihe 18
    Standort: A 18 - Bitte bestellen
    Zweigbibliothek: PIK Bibliothek
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
    BibTip Andere fanden auch interessant ...
  • 9
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Washington, DC : Smithsonian Inst. Pr
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: MOP SÜ
    In: Publication
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: S. 121-129.
    Serie: Publication / Smithsonian Institution 3634
    Standort: MOP - Bitte bestellen
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
    BibTip Andere fanden auch interessant ...
  • 10
    Schriftenreihen ausleihbar
    Schriftenreihen ausleihbar
    Berlin
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: MOP 21512 ; MOP 22453 ; MOP Per 86/A(12)
    In: Forschungs- und Erfahrungsberichte des Reichswetterdienstes
    Materialart: Schriftenreihen ausleihbar
    Seiten: 21 S.
    Serie: Forschungs- und Erfahrungsberichte des Reichswetterdienstes : Reihe A 12
    Sprache: Deutsch
    Standort: MOP - Bitte bestellen
    Standort: MOP - Bitte bestellen
    Standort: MOP - Bitte bestellen
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
    BibTip Andere fanden auch interessant ...
Schließen ⊗
Diese Webseite nutzt Cookies und das Analyse-Tool Matomo. Weitere Informationen finden Sie hier...