Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Bjerrum_defect> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 36 of
36
with 100 triples per page.
- Bjerrum_defect abstract "A Bjerrum defect is a crystallographic defect which is specific to ice, and which is partly responsible for the electrical properties of ice. It was first proposed by Niels Bjerrum in 1952 in order to explain the electrical polarization of ice in an electric field. A hydrogen bond normally has one proton, but a hydrogen bond with a Bjerrum defect will have either two protons (D defect) or no proton (L defect). The unfavorable defect strain is resolved when a water molecule pivots about an oxygen atom to produce hydrogen bonds with single protons. Dislocations of ice Ih along a slip plane create pairs of Bjerrum defects, one D defect and one L defect.Nonpolar molecules such as methane can form clathrate hydrates with water, especially under high pressure. Although there is no hydrogen bonding of water molecules when methane is the guest molecule of the clathrate, guest-host hydrogen bonding often forms with guest molecules in clathrates of many larger organic molecules, such as pinacolone and tetrahydrofuran. In such cases the guest-host hydrogen bonds result in the formation of L-type Bjerrum defect in the clathrate lattice. Oxygen atoms (in alcohol or carbonyl functional groups) and nitrogen atoms (in amine functional groups) in the guest molecules lead to transient hydrogen bonds and misoriented water molecules in the hydrate lattice.".
- Bjerrum_defect wikiPageID "28764397".
- Bjerrum_defect wikiPageLength "3320".
- Bjerrum_defect wikiPageOutDegree "15".
- Bjerrum_defect wikiPageRevisionID "670646710".
- Bjerrum_defect wikiPageWikiLink Category:Crystallographic_defects.
- Bjerrum_defect wikiPageWikiLink Category:Electrochemistry.
- Bjerrum_defect wikiPageWikiLink Category:Water_ice.
- Bjerrum_defect wikiPageWikiLink Clathrate_hydrate.
- Bjerrum_defect wikiPageWikiLink Crystallographic_defect.
- Bjerrum_defect wikiPageWikiLink Hydrogen_bond.
- Bjerrum_defect wikiPageWikiLink Ice.
- Bjerrum_defect wikiPageWikiLink Ice_Ih.
- Bjerrum_defect wikiPageWikiLink Niels_Bjerrum.
- Bjerrum_defect wikiPageWikiLink Pinacolone.
- Bjerrum_defect wikiPageWikiLink Proton.
- Bjerrum_defect wikiPageWikiLink Strain_(chemistry).
- Bjerrum_defect wikiPageWikiLink Tetrahydrofuran.
- Bjerrum_defect wikiPageWikiLinkText "Bjerrum L defect".
- Bjerrum_defect wikiPageWikiLinkText "Bjerrum defect".
- Bjerrum_defect hasPhotoCollection Bjerrum_defect.
- Bjerrum_defect wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Mineral-stub.
- Bjerrum_defect wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Bjerrum_defect subject Category:Crystallographic_defects.
- Bjerrum_defect subject Category:Electrochemistry.
- Bjerrum_defect subject Category:Water_ice.
- Bjerrum_defect hypernym Defect.
- Bjerrum_defect type Disease.
- Bjerrum_defect type Defect.
- Bjerrum_defect comment "A Bjerrum defect is a crystallographic defect which is specific to ice, and which is partly responsible for the electrical properties of ice. It was first proposed by Niels Bjerrum in 1952 in order to explain the electrical polarization of ice in an electric field. A hydrogen bond normally has one proton, but a hydrogen bond with a Bjerrum defect will have either two protons (D defect) or no proton (L defect).".
- Bjerrum_defect label "Bjerrum defect".
- Bjerrum_defect sameAs m.0ddfmy_.
- Bjerrum_defect sameAs Q4919614.
- Bjerrum_defect sameAs Q4919614.
- Bjerrum_defect wasDerivedFrom Bjerrum_defect?oldid=670646710.
- Bjerrum_defect isPrimaryTopicOf Bjerrum_defect.