Publication | Closed Access
Quartzlike Carbon Dioxide: An Optically Nonlinear Extended Solid at High Pressures and Temperatures
279
Citations
16
References
1999
Year
Optical MaterialsEngineeringConversion EfficiencyLaser MaterialSolid-state ChemistryChemistryNew MaterialOptical PropertiesQuartzlike Carbon DioxideMaterials SciencePhysicsCrystal MaterialNon-linear OpticExtended-solid PhaseOptical CeramicSolid-state PhysicPhotoelasticityGlassy CarbonNatural SciencesOptical PhysicApplied PhysicsCondensed Matter PhysicsHigh Pressures
An extended-solid phase, carbon dioxide phase V (CO2-V), was synthesized in a diamond anvil cell by laser heating the molecular orthorhombic phase, carbon dioxide phase III, above 40 gigapascals and 1800 kelvin. This new material can be quenched to ambient temperature above 1 gigapascal. The vibration spectrum of CO2-V is similar to that of the quartz polymorph of silicon dioxide, indicating that it is an extended covalent solid with carbon-oxygen single bonds. This material is also optically nonlinear, generating the second harmonic of a neodymium-yttrium-lithium-fluoride laser at a wavelength of 527 nanometers with a conversion efficiency that is near 0.1 percent.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1