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1.
J Phys Chem B ; 128(14): 3508-3520, 2024 Apr 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38560894

RESUMEN

The structural aspects of ambient-temperature densification via pressurization at 25 GPa were studied by solid-state NMR for two case studies: An alkaline earth boroaluminosilicate glass with the composition 6CaO-3SrO-1BaO-10Al2O3-10B2O3-70SiO2 (labeled SAB) and a sodium magnesium borosilicate glass with the composition 10Na2O-10MgO-20B2O3-60SiO2 (labeled MNBS). For SAB glass, cold pressurization results in significant increases in the average coordination numbers of both boron and aluminum, in line with previous results found in hot-compressed alkali aluminoborosilicate glasses. In addition, 27Al/11B dipolar recoupling experiments reveal a significant decrease in the 11B/27Al dipolar interaction strength upon pressurization, suggesting that the higher-coordinated boron and aluminum species experience weaker magnetic interactions. While this is an expected consequence of the longer internuclear distances involving higher coordination states, the magnitude of the effect also is consistent with a decrease of average B-O-Al internuclear connectivity. By conjecture, a decreased B-O-Al connectivity may present a mechanism of plastic flow inhibiting crack initiation in aluminoborosilicate glasses. In the case of the MNBS glass, no change in the average boron coordination number was observed within experimental error; however, densification increases the extent of B-O-Si connectivity at the expense of small ring structures with dominant B-O-B connectivity. With regard to boron coordination, the data obtained for both case studies differ from those previously found in a series of alkali borosilicate glasses, which had shown an unexpected decrease in N4 upon increased pressure. The results of the present study highlight the importance of changes of medium-range order regarding densification.

2.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 14(19): 4471-4481, 2023 May 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37154700

RESUMEN

Alkali-borosilicate glasses with composition (80-x)SiO2-xB2O3-20Na2O (10 ≤ x ≤ 30) were subjected to a 25 GPa compression and decompression at room temperature, resulting in density increases between 1.4% and 1.9%. The structural changes associated with this process have been investigated and compared with uncompressed glasses having the same thermal history. Systematic trends are identified, using Raman scattering and multinuclear solid-state Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (ssNMR). Perhaps counterintuitively, pressurization tends to increase the concentration of three-coordinated boron species (B(III) units) at the expense of four-coordinated boron (B(IV) units). 23Na NMR spectra show a systematic shift toward higher frequencies in the pressurized glasses, consistent with shorter average Na-O distances. The results are consistently explained in terms of a breakage of Si-O-B4 linkages resulting in the formation of nonbridging oxygen species. Pressure effects on the spectra are reversed by annealing the glasses at their respective glass transition temperatures.

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