Abstract

The structures of sodium aluminophosphate glasses prepared by both sol-gel as well as melt-cooling routes have been extensively characterized by high-resolution solid-state 23Na, 27Al, and 31P single and double-resonance NMR techniques, including quantitative connectivity studies by 27Al <--> 31P and 23Na <--> 31P rotational echo double-resonance (REDOR) methods. Studies along four compositional lines, I: (AlPO4)x -(NaPO3)1-x, II: (Na2O)x -(AlPO4)1-x, III: (NaAlO2)x -(NaPO3)1-x, and IV: (Al2O3)x (NaPO3)1-x, reveal that the network structures of those glasses that are accessible by either preparation method are essentially identical. However, the significantly extended glass-forming ranges available by the sol-gel route facilitate exploration of the structure/composition relationships in more detail, revealing a number of interesting universal features throughout the whole glass system. Both short- and medium-range order appear to be controlled strongly by the O/P ratio of the glasses studied: Up to an O/P ratio of 3.5 (pyrophosphate composition), aluminum is predominantly six-coordinated and fully connected to phosphorus (Al(OP)6 sites). In the region 3.5 < or = O/P < or = 4.0, a dramatic structural transformation takes place, leading to the appearance of additional four- and five-coordinated aluminum species whose second coordination spheres are also entirely dominated by phosphorus. The structure of glasses with an O/P ratio of precisely 4.0 (orthophosphate) is dominated by Al(OP)4 units. As the O/P ratio increases beyond 4.0, the average extent of Al-O-P connectivity is decreased significantly. Here, new types of five- and six-coordinated aluminum units, which are only weakly connected to phosphorus, are formed, while the network modifier is attracted mainly by the phosphate units.

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