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Ultraviolet/visible cadmium sulfide

Thin-layer plates were made with silica gel-calcium sulfate and each contained a mixture of zinc silicate and zinc cadmium sulfide as phosphors. Separated components are generally visible under ultraviolet light by fluorescence quenching. This was true, in part, for the pyrethrins, except that some of the separated components possessed a natural fluorescence under the ultraviolet lamps. [Pg.63]

In certain solids such as titanium dioxide or cadmium sulfide, the energy of the band gap corresponds to that of light (visible, ultraviolet, or infrared), with the result that the solid, when illuminated, may become electrically conducting or acquire potent chemical redox characteristics because of the promotion of electrons to the conduction band (which is normally unoccupied). These properties have obvious practical significance and are considered at length in Chapter 19. [Pg.74]


See other pages where Ultraviolet/visible cadmium sulfide is mentioned: [Pg.50]    [Pg.417]    [Pg.1466]    [Pg.519]    [Pg.106]    [Pg.519]    [Pg.425]    [Pg.493]    [Pg.13]    [Pg.318]    [Pg.535]    [Pg.683]    [Pg.675]    [Pg.725]    [Pg.663]    [Pg.757]    [Pg.731]    [Pg.721]    [Pg.755]    [Pg.675]   


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Ultraviolet-visible

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