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An Interesting Infra-Red Absorption Band in Fused Quartz

Abstract

To check the calibration of an infra-red spectrometer, we attempted to locate a fairly sharp band of fused quartz reported by Dreisch1 as existing at 2.75 with an intensity of absorption of 75 per cent when a 5 mm. specimen was used, and located by Parlin2 at 2.71 with an intensity of absorption of 55 per cent in a 2 mm. specimen. To our surprise, no such band appeared, although we used several different plate and lens specimens, the thickest sample having a thickness of 5 mm. In the mean-time, a paper by Drummond3 has appeared, presenting a careful plotting of the spectra of crystalline and fused quartz. With 6 mm. samples of the latter, he found a 2.73 band with a 20 per cent absorption. His paper is particularly interesting because it plots for comparison the values of the absorption co-efficient K for fused quartz and for the ordinary and extraordinary rays of crystalline quartz. Throughout the 4–8 region, the graph for fused quartz assumes a kind of average position for the other two, which are qualitatively similar to each other. But in the 3 region there is a profound difference, a fact discovered by Dreisch1, who ascribed it to a destruction of the crystal lattice upon fusion, the inference being that fusion shifts a 3 crystalline band to the new position.

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References

  1. T. Dreisch, Z. Phys., 42, 426 (1927).

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  2. W. A. Parlin, Phys. Rev., 34, 81 (1929).

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  3. D. G. Drummond, Proc. Roy. Soc., A, 153, 318 (1936).

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  4. Rayleigh, Proc. Opt. Convention, I, 41 (1926).

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  5. Plyler and Williams, Phys. Rev., 15, 197 (1936).

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ELLIS, J., LYON, W. An Interesting Infra-Red Absorption Band in Fused Quartz. Nature 137, 1031–1032 (1936). https://doi.org/10.1038/1371031c0

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