Acknowledgments | p. xi |
List of Abbreviations | p. xiii |
Introduction | p. 1 |
The structure of the book | p. 13 |
The Discovery of the Piezoelectric Effect | p. 15 |
The appearance of the effect | p. 15 |
A brief history of pyroelectricity | p. 24 |
The Curies' model | p. 29 |
The causes of the discovery | p. 31 |
Predicting a converse effect | p. 35 |
The experimental detection of the converse effect | p. 39 |
The Curies' experiment | p. 39 |
Rontgen's and Kundt's experiments | p. 44 |
Early experiments and the examination of the geometry of piezoelectricity | p. 48 |
Hypotheses on the source of piezoelectricity | p. 55 |
Mallard and the systematic presentation of piezoelectricity | p. 61 |
The Road to the Descriptive Theory | p. 65 |
Czermak's research on quartz | p. 65 |
Czermak's theory | p. 66 |
Experimental examination | p. 68 |
Absolute measurement of the piezoelectric coefficient | p. 72 |
The discovery of the electric effect of torsion in quartz | p. 74 |
Voigt's general theory: motives and basic assumptions | p. 77 |
The roots of Voigt's employment of symmetry | p. 79 |
Neumann on symmetry | p. 80 |
The French molecular school | p. 83 |
Neumann's students | p. 87 |
The general theory: scope and results | p. 89 |
The basic piezoelectric laws of all crystals | p. 89 |
The effects due to various stresses | p. 90 |
Pyroelectricity | p. 92 |
Concluding remarks to Part I | p. 93 |
Theories and Models about the Causes of the Piezoelectric Phenomena | p. 99 |
Approaches toward elasticity and electricity | p. 101 |
Theories of elasticity | p. 102 |
Theories of dielectrics | p. 104 |
Lodge and Thompson's hypothesis of unilateral conductivity | p. 107 |
Duhem's thermoelectric theory | p. 110 |
Molecular theories | p. 118 |
Riecke's molecular theory of pyroelectricity | p. 118 |
Riecke's elaborated molecular explanation for piezoelectricity | p. 122 |
Voigt's elaboration | p. 128 |
Voigt's alternative | p. 130 |
Lord Kelvin's mechanical models | p. 132 |
First molecular model | p. 132 |
The method of models | p. 136 |
Second molecular model | p. 138 |
An atomistic model | p. 141 |
Concluding remarks | p. 144 |
Theoretical Elaboration of Voigt's Theory | p. 149 |
Pockels's theory of the converse effect | p. 150 |
Electro-optic theory | p. 151 |
Theory of the converse piezoelectric effect | p. 153 |
Duhem's thermodynamic theory | p. 156 |
The thermodynamic functions | p. 157 |
Duhem's application | p. 158 |
The converse effect | p. 162 |
Merits and limitations of Duhem's work | p. 163 |
Duhem and Pockels on the reciprocity of the phenomena | p. 165 |
Riecke's thermodynamics of tourmaline | p. 168 |
Voigt's theory of secondary phenomena | p. 175 |
Piezoelectricity and theory of dielectrics | p. 179 |
Empirical Work in the 1890s | p. 187 |
Voigt and Riecke's determination of piezoelectric constants | p. 187 |
The confirmation of the theory | p. 187 |
German versus French methods of determination | p. 192 |
Determining the constants | p. 195 |
Pyroelectricity | p. 197 |
Hankel and Lindenberg's experiments | p. 198 |
Pockels's study of the relation between piezoelectricity and electro-optics | p. 200 |
The relation between piezoelectricity and pyroelectricity | p. 205 |
Voigt's examination of Thomson's hypothesis | p. 207 |
The monopoly of Gottingen and the place of piezoelectric research in a wider context | p. 210 |
Rontgen's and J. Curie's later determination of Quartz's piezoelectric constant | p. 214 |
Conclusions: experiments and their roles in a theoretical phase | p. 221 |
Concluding Remarks | p. 227 |
Pretheoretical and theoretical phases of study | p. 227 |
National or international science? | p. 230 |
Molecular and phenomenological theories | p. 233 |
Earlier Appearances of Electricity by Pressure | p. 239 |
Mathematical Works on Voigt's General Theory | p. 247 |
Voigt's Concepts of Electric Charge | p. 249 |
Tables | p. 251 |
Chronological table of major events in the history of piezoelectricity | p. 251 |
Annual publications on piezoelectricity 1880-99 | p. 253 |
Contributors to piezoelectricity by national division 1880-98 | p. 254 |
Major theories suggested for piezoelectricity | p. 255 |
Discoveries of the effects of conversion in crystals | p. 255 |
Bibliography | p. 257 |
Index | p. 267 |
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