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Ray L. Frost

Researcher at Queensland University of Technology

Publications -  1359
Citations -  45933

Ray L. Frost is an academic researcher from Queensland University of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Raman spectroscopy & Infrared spectroscopy. The author has an hindex of 86, co-authored 1356 publications receiving 41053 citations. Previous affiliations of Ray L. Frost include University of Western Sydney & Southwest University of Science and Technology.

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Effect of Al content on the structure of Al-substituted goethite: a micro-Raman spectroscopic study

TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of Al content on the goethite lattice was investigated using micro-Raman spectroscopy, and the results indicated that the Al substitution not only hinders the transformation of goethites, but also retarded the crystallization of thermally formed hematite, which implied the promising application in other substituted metal oxides or hydroxides.
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Raman spectroscopy of gerhardtite at 298 and 77 K

TL;DR: Raman spectroscopy has been used to study the nature of gerhardtite, a naturally occurring basic copper(II) nitrate of formula Cu2NO3(OH)3 as mentioned in this paper.
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The dehydroxylation of basic aluminum sulfate: An infrared emission spectroscopic study

TL;DR: The tridecameric aluminum polymer [AlO 4 Al 12 (OH) 24 (H 2 O) 12 ] 7+ was prepared by forced hydrolysis of Al 3+ up to an OH/Al molar ratio of 22 as discussed by the authors.
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Raman Spectroscopy Study of Selected Uranophanes

TL;DR: In this article, the Raman spectra at 298 and 77 K of three uranophane samples from different localities are described and interpreted, and the U-O bond lengths in uranyls are calculated from the spectra and compared with the published data of single crystal structure.
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Vibrational spectroscopic study of the nitrate containing hydrotalcite mbobomkulite.

TL;DR: The observation of multiple water stretching vibrations implies that there are different types of water present in the hydrotalcite structure, which would result from different hydrogen bond structures.