| Material | n at λ=589.3 nm |
|---|---|
| Vacuum | 1 (exactly) |
| Helium | 1.000036 |
| Air at STP | 1.0002926 |
| carbon dioxide | 1.00045 |
| water ice | 1.31 |
| liquid water (20°C) | 1.333 |
| cryolite | 1.338 |
| ethanol | 1.36 |
| glycerine | 1.4729 |
| rock salt | 1.516 |
| glass (typical) | 1.5 to 1.9 |
| Crown glass | 1.52 |
| salt (NaCl) | 1.544 |
| polycarbonate | 1.59 |
| bromine | 1.661 |
| cubic zirconia | 2.15 to 2.18 |
| diamond | 2.419 |
| moissanite (silicon carbide) | 2.65 to 2.69 |
| cinnabar (mercury sulfide) | 3.02 |
| gallium phosphide | 3.5 |
| gallium arsenide | 3.927 |
| silicon | 4.01 |
Many materials have a well-characterized refractive index, but these indices depend strongly upon the wavelength of light. Therefore, any numeric value for the index is meaningless unless the associated wavelength is specified.
There are also weaker dependencies on temperature, pressure/stress, et cetera, as well on precise material compositions (presence of dopants et cetera); for many materials and typical conditions, however, these variations are at the percent level or less. Thus, it is especially important to cite the source for an index measurement if precision is required.
In general, an index of refraction is a complex number with both a real and imaginary part, where the latter indicates the strength of absorption loss at a particular wavelength—thus, the imaginary part is sometimes called the extinction coefficient k. Such losses become particularly significant, for example, in metals at short (e.g. visible) wavelengths, and must be included in any description of the refractive index.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"List of indices of refraction".
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