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Densification of Sodium Borosilicate Glasses at Ambient Temperature: Structural Investigations by Solid-State Nuclear Magnetic Resonance and Raman Scattering.

Millena LogradoTomiki InoueShingo NakaneYoshinari KatoHiroki YamazakiAkihiro YamadaHellmut Eckert
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2023)
Alkali-borosilicate glasses with composition (80- x )SiO 2 - x B 2 O 3 -20Na 2 O (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). 23 Na 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-B 4 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.
Keyphrases
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