Abstract

Anomalous thermal expansion and other properties of borate glasses have previously been given a structural explanation by Abe. This explanation is here reinterpreted and revised in terms of the structon theory of Huggins. In agreement with Warren, it is postulated that, in glasses containing, in addition to boric oxide, small relative amounts of an alkali or alkaline‐earth oxide, some of the boron atoms are surrounded by four oxygen atoms and all the oxygen atoms bridge between two boron atoms. At concentrations beyond that of the thermal expansion minimum, some oxygens are assumed to have only one boron neighbor. These ideas are formulated quantitatively and are used to interpret pertinent experimental data. From the concentrations where the property‐composition curves show breaks, conclusions may be drawn as to the average number of oxygens surrounding each metal atom.

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