Tailoring chemical bonds to design unconventional glasses.
Jean-Yves RatyChristophe BicharaCarl-Friedrich SchönCarlo GattiTobias W W MaßPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2024)
Glasses are commonly described as disordered counterparts of the corresponding crystals; both usually share the same short-range order, but glasses lack long-range order. Here, a quantification of chemical bonding in a series of glasses and their corresponding crystals is performed, employing two quantum-chemical bonding descriptors, the number of electrons transferred and shared between adjacent atoms. For popular glasses like SiO 2 , GeSe 2 , and GeSe, the quantum-chemical bonding descriptors of the glass and the corresponding crystal hardly differ. This explains why these glasses possess a similar short-range order as their crystals. Unconventional glasses, which differ significantly in their short-range order and optical properties from the corresponding crystals are only found in a distinct region of the map spanned by the two bonding descriptors. This region contains crystals of GeTe, Sb 2 Te 3 , and GeSb 2 Te 4 , which employ metavalent bonding. Hence, unconventional glasses are only obtained for solids, whose crystals employ theses peculiar bonds.