Abstract

Noble metals such as Ag can be used as nucleation agents in glass ceramics. In glasses, it is incorporated predominantly as AgI. At temperatures slightly above the glass transition temperature, Tg, AgI reacts with SbIII to SbV and metallic Ag. Usually, face-centered cubic Ag particles are nearly spherical and get facetted during crystal growth. By contrast, in the case of BaO/SrO/ZnO/SiO2 glasses, silver has, in comparison to other noble metals, another significant, yet different effect. It forms metallic particles (hexagonal phase) with plate-like morphology during thermal treatment at 675 °C. In the second step of thermal treatment at 760 °C, this phase most probably expels some metallic Sb, which is oxidized by SbV (present in the surrounding glass phase) to SbIII. As a result, the plate-like morphology is maintained and a crystalline shell around the metallic core is formed, mainly consisting of ZnO with some SiO2 and antimony oxide, as proved by scanning transmission electron microscopy combined with energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy. This shell triggers the volume crystallization of Ba0.5Sr0.5Zn2Si2O7, a phase with low thermal expansion. By comparison, alloying of Au with Sb does not occur according to the phase diagram. Instead, a thermal treatment at temperatures slightly above Tg leads to nanocrystalline, spherical Au particles. Hence, alloying and subsequent decomposition of the alloy is a prerequisite for the formation of plate-like noble metal particles.

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