Abstract: | The optical birefringence and refractive index have been measured for crazes grown in specimens of varying thickness. The birefringence was found to consist of the sum of a small negative orientation term and a large positive form term. The latter term could be altered by filling the craze with liquids of various different refractive indexes. Two crazes, which showed a relatively constant width as the specimen thickness changed, could be described by a model with craze having a constant refractive index and birefringence but with impervious dense skins on either side. The numerical value of the form birefringence was approximately 0.6 of that predicted from a model of parallel rods which is not surprising as crazes have a networklike structure. The values of craze refractive index were in good agreement with other measurements. The existence of skins, of thickness approximately 300 nm, places some doubt on the relevance of thin-film electron microscope observations to the situation in the bulk. Other crazes which tapered in width were found to show both varying skin thickness and refractive index along their length. |