Login / Signup

Packing and the structural transformations in liquid and amorphous oxides from ambient to extreme conditions.

Anita ZeidlerPhilip Stephen SalmonLawrie Basil Skinner
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2014)
Liquid and glassy oxide materials play a vital role in multiple scientific and technological disciplines, but little is known about the part played by oxygen-oxygen interactions in the structural transformations that change their physical properties. Here we show that the coordination number of network-forming structural motifs, which play a key role in defining the topological ordering, can be rationalized in terms of the oxygen-packing fraction over an extensive pressure and temperature range. The result is a structural map for predicting the likely regimes of topological change for a range of oxide materials. This information can be used to forecast when changes may occur to the transport properties and compressibility of, e.g., fluids in planetary interiors, and is a prerequisite for the preparation of new materials following the principles of rational design.
Keyphrases
  • air pollution
  • physical activity
  • ionic liquid
  • climate change
  • social media
  • high density