Abstract

Magic-angle-spinning (MAS) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiments and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations were employed to investigate Na2O-B2O3-SiO2 and MgO-Na2O-B2O3-SiO2 glass structures up to ≈0.3 nm. This encompassed the {Na[p]}, {Mg[p]}, and {B[3], B[4]} speciations and the {Si, B[p], M[p]}-BO and {Si, B[p], M[p]}-NBO interatomic distances to the bridging oxygen (BO) and nonbridging oxygen (NBO) species, where the superscript indicates the coordination number. The MD simulations revealed the dominance of Mg[5] coordinations, as mirrored in average Mg2+ coordination numbers in the 5.2-5.5 range, which are slightly lower than those of the larger Na+ cation but with a narrower coordination distribution stemming from the higher cation field strength (CFS) of the smaller divalent Mg2+ ion. We particularly aimed to elucidate such Na+/Mg2+ CFS effects, which primarily govern the short-range structure but also the borosilicate (BS) glass network order, where both MD simulations and heteronuclear double-resonance 11B/29Si NMR experiments revealed a reduction of B[4]-O-Si linkages relative to B[3]-O-Si upon Mg2+-for-Na+ substitution. These effects were quantified and discussed in relation to previous literature on BS glasses, encompassing the implications for simplified structural models and descriptions thereof.

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