Published in Henry Rzepa's Blog

Following the general recognition of carbon as being tetrahedrally tetravalent in 1869 (Paterno) and 1874 (Van’t Hoff and Le Bell), an early seminal exploitation of this to the conformation of cyclohexane was by Hermann Sachse in 1890.[cite]10.1002/cber.189002301216 [/cite] This was verified when the Braggs in 1913[cite]10.1098/rspa.1913.0084[/cite], followed by an oft-cited article by Mohr in 1918,[cite]10.1002/prac.19180980123[/cite]

References

Physical and Theoretical ChemistryGeneral Physics and Astronomy

Hexagonal Diamond—A New Form of Carbon

Published in The Journal of Chemical Physics
Authors F. P. Bundy, J. S. Kasper

A new crystalline form of carbon—hexagonal diamond—has been synthesized in the laboratory under conditions of static pressure exceeding about 130 kbar and temperature greater than about 1000°C. It is necessary to start with well-crystallized graphite in which the c axes of the crystallites are parallel to each other and to the direction of compression. There is electrical evidence that the transformation starts at room temperature but hexagonal diamond is not retrieved unless a setting temperature exceeding about 1000°C is applied. The electrical and crystal characteristics have been studied. The crystal structure is hexagonal with a=2.52 Å and c=4.12 Å. The theoretical density is 3.51+g/cm3, same as cubic diamond. It has also been prepared recently in another laboratory from crystalline graphite by a method involving intense shock compression and strong thermal quenching. More recently it has been discovered to be present to the extent of over 30% in the Canyon Diablo meteorite diamonds.

General Medicine

The structure of the diamond

Published in Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Containing Papers of a Mathematical and Physical Character

There are two distinct methods by which the X-rays may be made to help to a determination of crystal structure. The first is based on the Laue photograph and implies the reference of each spot on the photograph to its proper reflecting plane within the crystal. It then yields information as to the positions of these planes and the relative numbers of atoms which they contain. The X-rays used are the heterogeneous rays which issue from certain bulbs, for example, from the commonly used bulb which contains a platinum anticathode. The second method is based on the fact that homogeneous X-rays of wave-length λ are reflected from a set of parallel and similar crystal planes at an angle θ (and no other angle) when the relation n λ = 2 d sin θ is fulfilled. Here d is the distance between the successive planes, θ is the glancing angle which the incident and reflected rays make with the planes, and n is a whole number which in practice so far ranges from one to five. In this method the X-rays used are those homogeneous beams which issue in considerable intensity from some X-ray bulbs, and are characteristic radiations of the metal of the anticathode. Platinum, for example, emits several such beams in addition to the heterogeneous radiation already mentioned. A bulb having a rhodium anticathode, which was constructed in order to obtain a radiation having about half the wave-length of the platinum characteristic rays, has been found to give a very strong homogeneous radiation consisting of one main beam of wave-length 0.607 x 10 -8 cm.,*, and a much less intense beam of wave-length 0.533 x 10 -8 cm. It gives relatively little hetero­geneous radiation. Its spectrum, as given by the (100) planes of rock-salt, is shown in fig. 1. It is very convenient for the application of the second method. Bulbs having nickel, tungsten, or iridium anticathodes have not so far been found convenient; the former two because their homogeneous radiations are relatively weak, the last because it is of much the same wave-length as the heterogeneous rays which the bulb emits, while it is well to have the two sets of rays quite distinct. The platinum homogeneous rays are of lengths somewhat greater than the average wave-length of the general heterogeneous radiation; the series of homogeneous iridium rays are very like the series of platinum rays raised one octave higher. For convenience, the two methods may be called the method of the Laue photograph, or, briefly, the photographic method, and the reflection method. The former requires heterogeneous rays, the latter homogeneous. The two methods throw light upon the subject from very different points and are mutually helpful.