Abstract
Two series of CuO-containing sodium phosphate glasses with 40, and 50mol% P2O5 were prepared. 31P magic angle spinning nuclear magnetic resonance (MAS-NMR) and Fourier-transformed infrared (FTIR) spectra were applied to characterize the short-range structure of the glasses. 31P NMR spectra reveal the presence of Q2- and Q1-tetrahedral sites in both glass series. The depolymerization of phosphate chains by the addition of CuO was described by the decrease in the concentration of Q2-tetrahedral sites and the increase in that of Q1-tetrahedral sites. The presence of 1Q2 peaks (Q2 site covalently bonded to one copper) in the 31P NMR spectra indicates that a portion of CuO, which acts as a network former, enters the glass network to form covalent POCu linkage in the polyphosphate glasses. The 1Q2 site population increases with increasing CuO content. Almost all the CuO act as network modifiers in the metaphosphate glasses with CuO <30mol%; the 1Q2 sites only exist in the glasses with high CuO content (≥30mol%). FTIR analyses reveal the shortening of phosphate chains by the shift of (POP)as band to higher wavenumber due to the addition of CuO. The absorption band of the POCu stretching mode is assigned at around 1080cm−1.
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