ABSTRACT
K3FeTe2O8(OH)2(H2O)2 was synthesized under hydrothermal conditions from Te(OH)6, FeSO4·7H2O and 85â wt% KOH in a 1:2:6 molar ratio. The crystal structure is built of a triperiodic network. One disordered water molecule per formula unit is located in a channel and can be partially removed by heating. Systematic one-dimensional diffuse scattering indicates a polytypic character, which is best described by application of the order-disorder theory. The major polytype is monoclinic with pseudo-orthorhombic metrics. It is interrupted by fragments of an orthorhombic polytype. The diffraction intensities are analyzed using structure factor calculations.
ABSTRACT
Acquisition of classical absorption spectra of liquids in the mid-IR range with quantum cascade lasers (QCLs) is often limited in sensitivity by noise from the laser source. Alternatively, measurement of molecular dispersion (i.e., refractive index) spectra poses an experimental approach that is immune to intensity fluctuations and further offers a direct relationship between the recorded signal and the sample concentration. In this work, we present an external cavity quantum cascade laser (EC-QCL) based Mach-Zehnder interferometer setup to determine dispersion spectra of liquid samples. We present two approaches for acquisition of refractive index spectra and compare the qualitative experimental results. Furthermore, the performance for quantitative analysis is evaluated. Finally, multivariate analysis of a spectrally complex mixture comprising three different sugars is performed. The obtained figures of merit by partial least squares (PLS) regression modelling compare well with standard absorption spectroscopy, demonstrating the potential of the introduced dispersion spectroscopic method for quantitative chemical analysis.