Abstract

Lead fluoroborate glasses were prepared by the melt-quenching technique and characterized in terms of (micro)structural and electrical properties. The study was conducted on as prepared as well as temperature- and/or electric field–treated glass samples. The results show that, in the as-prepared glassy-state materials, electrical conductivity improved with increasing the PbF2 glass content. This result involves both an increase of the fluoride charge carrier density and, especially, a decrease of the activation energy from a glass structure expansion improving charge carrier mobility. Moreover, for the electric field–treated glass samples, surface crystallization was observed even below the glass transition temperature. As previously proposed in literature, and shown here, the occurrence of this phenomenon arose from an electrochemically induced redox reaction at the electrodes, followed by crystallite nucleation. Once nucleated, growth of β-PbF2 crystallites, with the indication of incorporating reduced lead ions (Pb+), was both (micro)structurally and electrically detectable and analyzed. The overall crystallization-associated features observed here adapt well with the floppy-rigid model that has been proposed to further complete the original continuous-random-network model by Zachariasen for closely addressing not only glasses’ structure but also crystallization mechanism. Finally, the crystallization-modified kinetic picture of the glasses’ electrical properties, through application of polarization/depolarization measurements originally combined with impedance spectroscopy, was extensively explored.

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