Ice V: Difference between revisions
		
		
		
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'''Ice V''' was discovered by the [http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/1946/index.html Nobel prize winner] Percy Williams Bridgman in 1912 (Ref. 1). Ice V has a monoclinic unit cell containing 28 molecules (Ref. 2). Ice V is partially proton disordered.  | '''Ice V''' was discovered by the [http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/1946/index.html Nobel prize winner] Percy Williams Bridgman in 1912 (Ref. 1). Ice V has a monoclinic unit cell containing 28 molecules (Ref. 2). Ice V is partially proton disordered.  | ||
==References==  | ==References==  | ||
Revision as of 11:45, 20 September 2007
Ice V was discovered by the Nobel prize winner Percy Williams Bridgman in 1912 (Ref. 1). Ice V has a monoclinic unit cell containing 28 molecules (Ref. 2). Ice V is partially proton disordered.
References
- Percy Williams Bridgman "Water in the liquid and five solid forms, under pressure", Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences XLVII pp. 441-558 (1912)
 - B. Kamb, A. Prakash and C. Knobler "Structure of ice V", Acta Crystallographica 22 pp. 706-715 (1967)
 - Carlos Vega, Carl McBride, Eduardo Sanz and Jose L. F. Abascal "Radial distribution functions and densities for the SPC/E, TIP4P and TIP5P models for liquid water and ices Ih, Ic, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII, VIII, IX, XI and XII", Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics 7 pp. 1450 - 1456 (2005)