Crystallography365

Blogging a crystal structure a day in 2014

Index

Uncategorized

  

Posted on 04/02/2014

Contributed by

Andrew Studer

Dusty crystals

What does it look like?

The image to the right shows the sideview of a plasma crystal in the laboratory. Dust particles are suspended in an argon plasma above a high-frequency electrode (bottom). The horizontal field of view is 2 cm. From the Max Plank Plasma Crystal Experiment http://www2011.mpe.mpg.de/pke/index_e.html

The image to the right shows the sideview of a plasma crystal in the laboratory. Dust particles are suspended in an argon plasma above a high-frequency electrode (bottom). The horizontal field of view is 2 cm. From the Max Plank Plasma Crystal Experiment http://www2011.mpe.mpg.de/pke/index_e.html

What is it?

It’s a crystal you can see! This is a photograph of a plasma crystal (sometimes called a Coulomb crystal). The width of the photo corresponds to about 4cm. The dots are micrometer size particles suspended in an argon gas discharge. The inset at top right shows a view of the crystal looking from above.

The gas discharge produces the diffuse purple glow, but the particles don't emit light themselves. They're being illuminated by a laser, which is why there's a yellow line along the disc at the bottom of the image. That disc, and the other one at the top, are the two electrodes for the high voltage that drives the discharge.

Gas discharges are commonly used in industry, for example in silicon chip manufacture and materials processing. Closer to home, sodium lamps and fluorescent tubes are also gas discharges.

Gas discharges are a type of plasma - the "fourth state of matter", which consists of free electrons and ions rather than the neutral atoms of a gas. It's probably no surprise to discover that a plasma with larger particles floating around in it (usually between a nanometer and a micrometer in size) is referred to as a "dusty plasma".

In industrial use, the dust is often an inconvenience (that's why silicon chips are made in clean rooms), but researcher H. Izeki realized in 1986 that it might be possible to engineer the dust to form crystals. The dust picks up a charge as a result of being bombarded by electrons, and the individual particles form a lattice to minimize the electrostatic repulsion. Dusty plasmas were "crystallised" by a number of groups (for example in Japan and Germany) in 1994 and dusty plasma research has exploded since then.

Where does it come from?

This lovely image is a photograph of a laboratory plasma at the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics in Garching, Germany.

Tags: Coulomb crystal   crystals   plasma   space  

Related articles

Quasicrystals
To the ends of the earth and beyond – the search for 'impossible' quasicrystals
Nickel sulfate hexahydrate
Crystals you can grow at home – Nickel Sulphate Hexahydrate
Cobalt tricyanomethanide
Five fold - Cobalt tricyanomethanide