Bridgman technique
Bridgman technique
[′brij·mən tek′nēk] (solid-state physics)
A method of growing single crystals in which a vertical cylinder that tapers conically to a point at the bottom and contains the substance to be crystallized in molten form is slowly lowered into a cold zone, resulting in crystallization beginning at the tip.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
References in periodicals archive
Yin, "Compositional homogeneity and electrical properties of lead magnesium niobate titanate single crystals grown by a modified bridgman technique," Japanese Journal of Applied Physics, vol.
Li, "Growth and electrical properties of large size Pb(In1/2Nb1/2)O-3-Pb(Mg1/3Nb2/3)O-3-PbTiO3 crystals prepared by the vertical Bridgman technique," Applied Physics Letters, vol.
The near-MPB composition 0.29PIN-0.44PMN-0.27PT single crystals were grown using the vertical Bridgman technique [5].
Fan, "Growth of the relaxor based ferroelectric single crystals Pb([In.sub.1/2][Nb.sub.1/2])[O.sub.3]Pb([Mg.sub.1/3][Nb.sub.2/3])[O.sub.3]-PbTi[O.sub.3] by vertical Bridgman technique," Ferroelectrics, vol.
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