Ice II
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Ice II was discovered by Gustav Tammann in 1900 [1]. Ice II is aproton-ordered ice phase and belongs to the space group, having 12 molecules per unit cell.
References[edit]
- Related reading
- Barclay Kamb "Ice. II. A proton-ordered form of ice", Acta Crystallographica 17 pp. 1437-1449 (1964)
- Barclay Kamb, Walter C. Hamilton, Sam J. LaPlaca and Anand Prakash "Ordered Proton Configuration in Ice II, from Single-Crystal Neutron Diffraction", Journal of Chemical Physics 55 pp. 1934-1945 (1971)
- C. Lobban, J. L. Finney and W. F. Kuhs "The p–T dependency of the ice II crystal structure and the effect of helium inclusion", Journal of Chemical Physics 117 pp. 3928-3934 (2002)
- G. Cruz León, S. Rodríguez Romo and V. Tchijov "Thermodynamics of high-pressure ice polymorphs: ice II", Journal of Physics and Chemistry of Solids 63 pp. 843-851 (2002)
- 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)
- E. G. Noya, C. Menduiña, J. L. Aragones, and C. Vega "Equation of State, Thermal Expansion Coefficient, and Isothermal Compressibility for Ices Ih, II, III, V, and VI, as Obtained from Computer Simulation", Journal of Physical Chemistry C 111 pp. 15877 - 15888 (2007)