Introduction
Although the rheology of ice has been a topic of considerable practical and academic interest over the years, many of the basic results are still subject to uncertainty. In part this is due to the inherently complex nature of ice, even in its pure form, but difficulty also stems from the fact that ice is a naturally occurring substance and is therefore subject to significant variations in its mode of occurrence and properties. The simplest and among the most well-studied aspects of ice rheology is the purely elastic behaviour which occurs in the limit as a moderate stress is applied for a very short time. In ice, as in all hexagonal crystals, the elastic behaviour is concisely described by a set of five elastic moduli (Reference Landau, Lifshits, Sykes and ReidLandau and Lifshils, 1959), the determination of which has been the object of a series of investigations beginning with the theoretical work of Reference PennyPenny (1948). Subsequent experiments (Reference Jona and ScherrerJona and Scherrer, 1952; Reference Green and MackinnonGreen and Mackinnon, 1956; Reference BassBass and others, 1957; Reference Dantl and GregoraDantl, 1968; Reference ProctorProctor, 1966; for review of results see Reference HobbsHobbs, 1974) based primarily on ultrasonic techniques have yielded values for the elastic moduli of frozen distilled water with stated uncertainties of the order of only a few per cent. The quoted results, however, show variations larger than can be explained by probable experimental error, thus suggesting that different samples of pure ice may possess differing elastic properties.
When extrapolating the results of laboratory experiments on controlled ice samples to engineering applications involving natural ice, it may be important to allow for variations in the purity and crystal quality of ice formed in the natural environment. That these variations might significantly affect the elastic properties of natural ice, is indicated by discrepancies in the elastic moduli of very similar artificially grown ice crystals (Reference Dantl, Riehl, Riehl, Bullemer and EngelhardtDantl, 1969). No precise determination of the full set of elastic moduli for any kind of naturally formed ice can be found in the literature. To some extent, this reflects the unsuitability of conventional ultrasonic techniques, when applied to many types of natural ice samples.
The method of Brillouin spectroscopy can be used to determine acoustic wave propagation velocities and hence the adiabatic elastic moduli of transparent crystalline materials (Reference Benedek and FritschBenedek and Fritsch, 1966; Reference Durand and PineDurand and Pine, 1968; Reference Stoicheff, Feld, Feld, Javan and KurnitStoicheff, 1973, Reference Stoicheff, Klein and Venables1977; Reference SandercockSandercock, 1975). This technique involves the scattering of light from hypersonic (acoustic) waves which arise spontaneously from thermal excitations within a crystal. The incident light is effectively Doppler-shifted upon scattering from the propagating density fluctuations. This permits accurate spectroscopic measurement of the hypersonic acoustic velocities. In the case of a single crystal, three independent modes or frequency-shifted components (one predominately longitudinal and two predominantly transverse) are, in principle, observed. Brillouin spectroscopy does not necessitate the use of any sort of acoustic transducer and the technique allows probing of sample regions with dimensions less than 1 mm3. These features make Brillouin spectroscopy a practical method for determining local elastic wave velocities in natural ice samples which may be homogeneous only over very small regions. Such a situation exists, for example, in polycrystalline ice, in lake or river ice containing numerous air bubbles, or in sea ice where brine cells and brine channels occupy spaces between crystals. In these cases one would expect acoustic wave velocities measured by conventional ultrasonic techniques to depend on the size, shape, and orientation of individual crystal grains, along with the distribution of air bubbles, brine cells, etc., within the sample. These velocity measurements would therefore not reflect the fundamental local elastic properties of the ice.
Brillouin spectroscopy has provided a practical method for determining the elastic constants of not only conventional transparent solids, but also such materials as solidified permanent gases (Reference Stoicheff, Klein and VenablesStoicheff, 1977; Reference Kiefte and ClouterKiefte and Clouter, 1975, Reference Kiefte and Clouter1976; Reference GammonGammon and others, 1978) where there is significant difficulty in forming and handling monocrystalline samples, layer compounds which generally form as small flaky crystals, liquid crystals, and semiconductors (Reference SandercockSandercock, 1975). The method has also been used to measure the temperature dependence of three of the elastic constants of ice Ih at low temperatures (Reference ErmolieffErmolieff, 1975). The results of the present application of Brillouin spectroscopy to laboratory-grown single crystals of pure ice at –3°C may be used for purposes of comparison with subsequent Brillouin measurements on natural ice samples.
Experimental technique
The small single crystals of ice required for the Brillouin scattering experiment were grown in a quartz sample cell 3 mm i.d., 5 mm o.d., and 2 cm long. The cell was housed in an evacuated plexiglas (polymethyl methacrylate) cylinder mounted in a bearing assembly which allowed rotation of the cell and housing about the cylindrical (vertical) axis. Heat was removed from the top and bottom of the sample cell via two brass clips which were attached with copper braids to a thermoelectric module. The temperature of the clip at the bottom of the cell was monitored with a GaAs temperature-sensing diode. The output of the diode was used to control heaters on the top and bottom clips through a feed-back circuit (Lakeshore DTC 500) which regulated the temperature at the bottom clip to well within 0.1 deg. Current was divided between the top and bottom heaters via an externally connected potentiometer, while a differential thermocouple indicated the temperature difference along the cell. Further details of the cryostat and temperature control system can be found in previous publications (Reference AhmadAhmad and others, 1978).
The water samples used in the experiments were doubly-distilled and had a conductivity of 1.07 × 10–2 (Ω m)–1 and a pH of 5.9. The principle impurities were dissolved atmospheric gases which remained after the pressure above the sample was reduced, by pumping, to the equilibrium vapour pressure of water near the freezing point. Prior to growing a single crystal of ice, it was necessary to induce ice nucleation in the water sample. This generally required supercooling 10 to 20 deg below freezing point, followed in some cases by a waiting period of a few hours. When the water in the cell solidified, invariably forming an ice sample that was not monocrystalline, the temperature was raised and the thermal gradient in the cell increased, until the ice remaining was a thin (< 0.5 mm) layer at the bottom of the cell. This layer was then annealed (generally for at least 6 h) until a visual inspection through crossed polaroids indicated that it was a single crystal. Cooling of the cell and reduction of the thermal gradient were then carried out in steps which yielded a crystal growth rate of about 2 mm per hour.
When a perfectly clear crystal filled the entire cell, Laue X-ray diffraction photographs were taken using a Philips (MG 101) X-ray source, a lead collimator, and a Polaroid XR-7 Land diffraction camera. The Laue photographs were used to verify the crystal quality of the ice sample and to determine the orientation of the crystallographic axes with respect to a coordinate system (see Fig. 1) fixed in the laboratory frame of reference. The orientations were calculated from the positions of spots on the Laue photograph using a program written for the HP 9825 electronic calculator.
Brillouin spectra of the ice single crystals were obtained using the optical system illustrated in Figure 1. The incident light source was a single-mode argon ion laser (Spectra Physics 165–08) using a power output of about 100 mW at 514.5 nm. The scattered light was analysed with a piezoelectrically scanned triple-pass Fabry–Perot interferometer utilizing λ/200, 93% reflectivity plates (Burleigh Instruments Inc.) and detected with a cooled photomultiplier tube (ITT FW130). The output from the photomultiplier was coupled through an amplifier discriminator (PAR 1120) to a data aquisition and stabilization system (Burleigh DAS 1), which in turn provided the ramp voltage used in scanning the Fabry–Perot interferometer. The multi-channel analyser (MCA) of the DAS system accumulated spectral data in the form of photon counts (intensity) versus MCA channel number (proportional to the Fabry–Perot plate separation and hence to the frequency of the scattered light). Additionally, the DAS system utilized negative feed-back circuitry to compensate for drift in the optical system, including Fabry–Perot misalignment, thereby allowing arbitrarily long spectral accumulation times (Reference GammonGammon and others, 1978).
Brillouin spectra were recorded for each of several orientations of four ice single crystals. The different orientations of a given crystal were obtained by rotating the cell about the cryostat axis. Since the directional dependence of sound-wave velocities in a hexagonal crystal, involves only the angle γ between the wavevector and the crystal c-axis (Reference Landau, Lifshits, Sykes and ReidLandau and Lifshits, 1959), efforts were made to obtain data well distributed over the full (0°–90°) range of γ values. This necessitated using the known orientation of a crystal to calculate, and thereby select, an appropriate angle of rotation for the cell prior to running each Brillouin spectrum. Usually, spectra were accumulated for sufficient time periods to allow clear resolution of the longitudinal and at least one transverse Brillouin component. These time periods averaged about 6 h, although some spectra were accumulated for periods exceeding 24 h. A typical Brillouin spectrum showing all three acoustic components is shown in Figure 2.
Results and analysis
The 30 Brillouin spectra obtained during the course of this experiment yielded 65 experimental data points. The raw spectral data were taken in digital form from the cathode ray tube of the DAS multichannel analyser and consisted of frequency shifts (measured in channel numbers) corresponding to the peaks of the respective Brillouin components. The number of channels separating two adjacent orders of the unshifted laser line corresponded to a reference frequency referred to as the free spectral range. The magnitude of the free spectral range, 11.101 GHz, was determined from a precise measurement of the plate separation (0.013503 m) of the Fabry–Perot interferometer. The measured Brillouin frequency shifts Ω were related to acoustic wave velocities V by the Brillouin equation,
(Reference Benedek and FritschBenedek and Fritsch, 1966), λ being the wavelength of the incident laser radiation, n the refractive index of the sample, and α the angle between the propagation directions of the incident and scattered laser radiation. The equations used to relate sound velocity to the density and elastic moduli of ice are given by Reference MusgraveMusgrave (1970). These equations were inverted with the aid of a computer-programmed least-squares fit procedure thereby yielding values for the elastic constants.The complete set of input data consisted of the frequency shift measurements listed in Table I, along with values for the density of ice ρ and the parameters λ, n, and α appearing in the Brillouin equation. The laser wavelength λ was 5.145 × 10–7 m with negligible uncertainty. The scattering angle α was established by the alignment of the optical system and was set at 90° with an estimated uncertainty of ±0.2°. The refractive index n of ice at – 3°C for light of wavelength 5.145 × 10–7 m was determined by linear interpolation from values given in the International critical tables (1926–33). The index was taken to be n = 1.312 ±0.001, where the uncertainty is included primarily to account for the slight birefringence (n° = 1.3117 ±0.0003, n e = 1.3131 ±0.0003) of hexagonal ice.
The density ρ of ice at–3°C was estimated to be 917.5 ±1.5 kg/m3, based on several values given in the literature. These values appear to show some dependence on the purity, age, and crystal quality of a given sample and on the method of measurement. A review of ice density measurements prior to 1940, along with a comment on their variability, can be found in the text by Reference DorseyDorsey (1940). The density value quoted in the International critical tables (1926–33) for ice at 0°C, 1 atm, is 916.8±0.5 kg/m3. An experiment utilizing the Bunsen Ice Calorimeter yielded a value of 916.71 ±0.05 kg/m3 for the density of freshly formed poly-crystalline ice at 0°C (Reference Ginnings and CorrucciniGinnings and Corruccini, 1947). Specific gravity measurements (by immersion in 2,2,4-trimethylpentane) on several high-quality monocrystals of pure ice from the Mendenhall Glacier gave an average value of 917.18 kg/m3 for the density at –3.5°C (Reference ButkovichButkovich, 1955). An X-ray crystallographic determination of the lattice parameters of tiny ice crystals frozen from droplets of distilled water (Reference LaPlaca and PostLaPlaca and Post, 1960), implied a density of 918.7 kg/m3 at –10°C. To form Table II, each of the four density values referred to above was corrected to the value appropriate for –3°C using the thermal expansion data of Reference ButkovichButkovich (1959). The 1.6% uncertainty allowed in the density of ice, for purposes of the present analysis, reflects the variability in density from sample to sample noted by several of the above mentioned authors and by Reference Dantl and GregoraDantl and Gregora (1968), who show that the density tends to decrease with sample age.
To facilitate error analysis, the sources of uncertainty in the elastic constants were divided into two categories. The first category included the systematic error terms, common to all five elastic constants, resulting from uncertainty in the values of λ, α, n, and ρ. The combined uncertainty in these quantities was calculated to be 0.4%. Secondly, a random error term resulted from uncertainty in the Brillouin frequency-shift measurements and in the orientations of the ice crystals. This error was estimated empirically from the scatter of the sound velocity data about the curves of V versus γ (see Fig. 3) specified by hexagonal symmetry. The empirical error calculation was included in the least-squares fit routine used to calculate the elastic constants. This routine also determined an empirical estimate for the standard deviation of the Brillouin frequency-shift measurements. Separate standard-deviation values were calculated for the frequency-shift data obtained from the first ice crystal and for that obtained from the subsequent three crystals. This was necessary because of the gradual accumulation of a light film of precipitated vacuum oil on the outside of the sample cell. This film caused distortion in the optics and hence significantly decreased resolution in the Brillouin spectra obtained from the first crystal (A). Removal of the oil film reduced scatter and consequently reduced the empirical standard deviation in data obtained from the subsequent three crystals by a factor of 3.5. This factor was used to down-weight the data from the first crystal when making the final determination of the elastic constants.
The resulting values for the adiabatic elastic moduli of ice Ih at –3°C, are listed below. The error has been divided into its systematic and random components.
Figure 3 shows the complete set of experimental data points, along with the least-squares curves of Ω and V versus γ for the three acoustic modes.
Discussion
The present results, along with the results of three previous experimental determinations of the full set of elastic moduli of ice Ih, are summarized in Table III. The tabulated values for the cij′s have been adjusted to correspond to a temperature of –3°C, using the linear temperature-correction factors determined by Reference Dantl and GregoraDantl (1968). The good general agreement among the four sets of results indicates a lack of significant acoustic dispersion in ice over the frequency range104 Hz to 1010 Hz. This in turn suggests that elastic moduli determined by Brillouin spectroscopy can be related to the quasi-static elastic behaviour of ice. In this respect, the Brillouin spectroscopic results can be applied with equal reliability as can results obtained by any other dynamic method of measurement.
The agreement of the present results with those of Reference Jona and ScherrerJona and Scherrer (1952) is within experimental uncertainty for all elastic constants except c 44, in which there is only a slight discrepancy. However, the elastic moduli measured by Reference Dantl and GregoraDantl (1968) average about 4% lower than the present results. These comparisons seem to support the hypothesis, suggested by Reference Dantl, Riehl, Riehl, Bullemer and EngelhardtDantl (1969), that the elastic moduli of ice increase with density and consequently decrease with the age of the given sample. The ice samples used by Dantl were aged for eight months prior to determination of their elastic moduli. In contrast, the samples used in the present experiment, and also presumably in the experiment by Jona and Scherrer, were not aged appreciably.
Brillouin spectroscopy has been demonstrated to be an effective technique for studying the elastic properties of ice monocrystals grown in the laboratory. The optical imperfections in naturally formed ice samples would tend to make accurate determination of their elastic moduli by Brillouin spectroscopy somewhat more difficult. However, there appear to be very few instances in which the method would be totally inapplicable. Particularly good results can be expected from experiments on clear glacial ice or on lake or river ice containing clear monocrystalline regions of greater than millimetre dimensions. In these cases, measurements of the elastic moduli by Brillouin spectroscopy could be made to possess uncertainties comparable to those obtained in the present experiment. Even very small variations in the elastic properties of the samples would thus be noted. In sea ice, highly irregular crystal grain structure and poor optical quality would make Brillouin measurements considerably less precise. Nevertheless, deviation of more than a few per cent in the elastic properties relative to those of fresh-water ice should be detectable. Brillouin scattering experiments on several types of natural ice, including sea ice, are currently in progress at this laboratory.
Acknowledgements
The assistance of Mr S. F. Ahmad in building the cryostat, and of Mr B. L. Whiffen in helping to set up the experiment and to analyse the data, is appreciated. Helpful discussions with Dr W. W. Denner are also gratefully acknowledged.