from PART I - PRINCIPLES AND INSTRUMENTATION
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 September 2009
Introduction
When a crystal such as quartz or feldspar is bombarded by a stream of high-energy electrons in a scanning electron microscope or other suitable instrument, photons (“particles” of light) are emitted, a phenomenon called cathodoluminescence (CL). Much is known about the origin of CL in artificial crystals because of their economic importance in the manufacture of television screens, computer monitors, and the like. Although less is known about the origin of CL in naturally occurring minerals, the fundamental causes of CL emissions are moderately well understood.
To visualize the factors responsible for CL emissions, it is useful to consider atoms in crystals in terms of the band theory of solids. Energy states of electrons in crystals depend upon whether the electrons are bound in particular atoms (inner-shell electrons) or are delocalized. Delocalized electrons are electrons that are not associated with individual atoms or identifiable chemical bonds, but are shared collectively by all the constituent atoms or ions of a substance. Delocalized electrons have wave functions (in quantum mechanics, a complex function of time and position) that in effect traverse the entire crystal. Individual atoms have discrete energy states that are associated with the orbits of shells of electrons in the atom. When atoms are spaced far apart, as in a gas, they have very little influence upon each other. By contrast, atoms within a solid, such as quartz or feldspar, have a marked effect upon other atoms in the crystal (atomic orbitals combine to form molecular orbitals).
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