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Optical Measurements of Water Lenses in Ice

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

M.E.R. Walford
Affiliation:
H.H. Wills Physics Laboratory, University of Bristol, Bristol BS8 ITL, England
D.W. Roberts
Affiliation:
H.H. Wills Physics Laboratory, University of Bristol, Bristol BS8 ITL, England
I. Hill
Affiliation:
H.H. Wills Physics Laboratory, University of Bristol, Bristol BS8 ITL, England
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Abstract

The dihedral angle of water at a grain boundary in ice is found, by measuring the optical focal length of lenticular water inclusions, to be 33.6 ± 0.7°. The new result leads to only minor revision of published experimental values of specific surface free energies in the ice–water system (Ketcham and Hobbs, 1969).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 1987

Introduction

After polycrystalline ice has been stressed at the melting point for a short time, groups of lenticular water inclusions can be found at certain of the grain boundaries (Reference Nye and MaeNye and Mae, 1972). Once the stress is relaxed, there is a period of thermal annealing during which the larger lenses grow at the expense of the smaller ones; in well-annealed ice the lenses are typically 20–200 µm in diameter. The equilibrium shape of a lens of given volume is determined by the balance of surface tensions acting at its rim (Fig. 1), and it follows that

where γ IW is the surface free energy of the ice-water interface, γ GB is that the grain boundary and 2θ is the dihedral angle measured in the water phase.

Fig. 1. A water lens at a grain boundary in ice.

The refractive index of water is slightly greater than that of ice (we may neglect the slight birefringence of ice), so that a lenticular water inclusion behaves optically as a converging lens. As we shall discuss later, although the water lenses are geometrically thick, they behave optically as thin lenses, because (µ IW − 1) « 1, where µ IW is the refractive index for an ice–water interface. Accordingly we find

where d is the lens diameter and f is the focal length measured in ice. We can determine θ by measuring d and f with a travelling microscope as shown in Figure 2. Parallel light is incident from below on to the horizontal plane containing the water lenses. The microscope is focussed on the plane containing the water lens and a measurement is made of the lens diameter d. It is then raised until the focus of the water lens is found. The vertical distance travelled is equal to the apparent focal length of the water lens in ice and must be multiplied by the refractive index of ice in order to give f. The experiment was originally carried out by Walford, who found the value 2θ = 32 ± 3°, which was reported in Reference Nye and MaeNye and Mae (1972). It has recently been repeated with some improvements by Hill and Roberts, who obtained the value 33.6 ± 0.7° (Reference HillHill, unpublished; Reference RobertsRoberts, unpublished).

Fig. 2. Ray-optical diagram of refraction by water lenses in ice, illustrating the image seen in the microscope for different positions of its plane of focus.

Experimental Details

Suitable samples of polycrystalline ice are prepared by the slow freezing of distilled water, continuously stirred to reduce bubble formation. The resulting ice contains crystals a few millimetres across, elongated in the growth direction. Rectangular blocks approximately 2 cm × 3 cm × 5 cm are cut, polished by melting against a warm metal plate, stressed in uniaxial compression at approximately 1 bar for 10 s, and left to anneal in iced water for 1 h. Then a chosen ice sample, orientated such that a suitable field of water lenses is horizontal, is jammed in a Perspex box by means of blocks of expanded polystyrene. It is covered to a depth of 2 cm with iced water, to reduce the unwanted distorting effects of refraction at the uneven surfaces of the block.

The lenses themselves are most clearly seen in white light, collimated to approximately 10−2 rad. Figure 3 shows the appearance of the lenses when the microscope is focussed (a) slightly below, and (b) slightly above the grain boundary. Lenses exactly in focus are almost invisible. It will be noticed that with the microscope focussed below the lens field, each lens appears slightly darker than the background and surrounded by a bright ring (the “Becke line”) of internal diameter d. When the microscope is focussed above the lens field, the lens image consists of a bright disc surrounded by a dark ring of external diameter d. According to thin-lens ray-optical theory, the thickness of the annular Becke line, b, is given by

where h is the apparent height above the grain boundary at which the microscope is focussed. By measuring b as a function of h, we obtain a preliminary value for 2θ of 33 ± 3°.

Fig. 3. Water-lens images photographed in white, paraxial illumination with the plane of focus of the microscope (a) slightly below, and (b) slightly above the lens plane. The diagonal lines are produced by a nearby water vein.

A better value can be obtained by measuring the diameter and then the apparent focal length of the water lens. The diameter is easily measured from photographs taken in white light but it is more difficult to find the height at which an image produced by a water lens is focussed, because the effects of diffraction are relatively large for such small lenses. For this purpose, a helium–neon laser is a suitable source of illumination. Unwanted modes are removed by focussing the laser light through a bloomed microscope objective lens on to a spatial filter carrying a 100 µm diameter pin-hole. The well-defined focus of the laser beam acts as an object placed 60 cm in air below the sample. The apparent height of the conjugate image formed by the water lens is found from a sequence of photographs taken with the microscope at different closely separated heights. Even in the presence of diffraction, the required image position is where the disc of illumination produced by the convergent water lens is smallest (Reference Born and WolfBorn and Wolf, 1970, p. 440). (This is true, because spherical aberration can be shown to be negligible in these experiments; in spite of the large dihedral angle of the presumably spherically curved water lenses, the small refractive index contrast makes the focal length for marginal rays differ by only 4% from the focal length for central rays.) A value for the dihedral angle of 33.6 ± 0.7° was obtained on carrying out measurements on 14 different lenses in two different fields, the lens diameters ranging from 65 to 115 µm.

An interesting, unexpected observation (of marginal statistical significance) is that the dihedral angle appears to increase systematically by a few degrees as the lens diameter increases from 65 to 115 µm. The effect may arise because of the slow, continuous annealing of a field of lenses of different sizes. However, no changes in lens size or focal length were directly observed during the course of the measurements. The effect is too small to constitute a severe source of systematic error.

Attempts to improve the precision of measurement of the focus by examining the detailed structure of the diffraction pattern in the vicinity of the focus were frustrated by what appeared to be radiation diffracted around the outside of the lens.

No account was taken in the present work of any possible effects of the crystallographic orientation of the two ice crystals on the lens shapes, but the absence of observable astigmatism in a horizontal lens implies that such effects are small. We hope this may form the subject of further research.

Discussion

The measurement of θ has significance in connection with the experimental measurement of interfacial free energies in the ice-water-vapour system. Knowing γ WV, the surface free energy of water, Reference Ketcham and HobbsKetcham and Hobbs (1969) made three independent measurements of suitable interfacial angles and so obtained values for γ IV, γ IW, and γ GB, the specific interfacial free energies associated with the ice-vapour, the ice-water, and the grain-boundary interfaces, respectively. The present measurement of 2θ is probably to be preferred to the corresponding measurement by Reference Ketcham and HobbsKetcham and Hobbs (1969) of 20 ± 10°, which was based on observations of dihedral angle where an intergranular vein of water crops out on the surface of polycrystalline ice. The angle so measured is probably not the same as that which would be measured at depth. The effect of using the present value of 33.6 ±0.7° is to cause a small upward revision from 33 to 34 mJ m−2 in the value of γ IW. The precision of the result remains limited by the difficulty of measuring the angle of contact of water on ice in the presence of vapour. Reference HobbsHobbs (1974) gave a useful discussion of the problem.

Acknowledgement

We wish to acknowledge that the inspiration for this work was provided originally by Professor J.F. Nye. A helpful observation was made by Dr V.J. Smith.

References

Born, M., and Wolf, E. 1970. Principles of optics. Fourth edition. Oxford, Pergamon Press.Google Scholar
Hill, I. Unpublished. Investigation into the surface energies of water substance through investigation of intergranular water lenses. [B.Sc. thesis. University of Bristol, 1986.]Google Scholar
Hobbs, P.V. 1974. Ice physics. Oxford, Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Ketcham, W.M., and Hobbs, P.V. 1969. An experimental determination of the surface energies of ice. Philosophical Magazine, Eighth Ser., Vol. 19, No. 162, p. 116173.Google Scholar
Nye, J.F., and Mae, S. 1972. The effect of non-hydrostatic stress on intergranular water veins and lenses in ice. Journal of Glaciology Vol. 11, No. 61, p. 81101.Google Scholar
Roberts, D.W. Unpublished. Investigation of surface free energies in ice water systems. [B.Sc. thesis, University of Bristol, 1986.]Google Scholar
Figure 0

Fig. 1. A water lens at a grain boundary in ice.

Figure 1

Fig. 2. Ray-optical diagram of refraction by water lenses in ice, illustrating the image seen in the microscope for different positions of its plane of focus.

Figure 2

Fig. 3. Water-lens images photographed in white, paraxial illumination with the plane of focus of the microscope (a) slightly below, and (b) slightly above the lens plane. The diagonal lines are produced by a nearby water vein.