Abstract

Understanding the atomic structure of glasses is critical for developing new generations of materials with important technical applications. In particular, the local environment of rare-earth ions and their distribution and clustering is of great relevance for applications of rare earth-containing glasses in photonic devices. In this work, the structure of Gd2O3 doped lithium and potassium aluminosilicate glasses is investigated as a function of their network modifier oxide (NMO–Li2O, K2O) to aluminum oxide ratio using molecular dynamics simulations. The applied simulation procedure yields a set of configurations, the so-called inherent structures, of the liquid state slightly above the glass transition temperature. The generation of a large set of inherent structures allows a statistical sampling of the medium-range order of the Gd3+ ions with less computational effort compared to other simulation methods. The resulting medium-range atomic structures of network former and modifier ions are in good agreement with experimental results and simulations of similar glasses. It was found that increasing NMO/Al ratio increases the network modifier coordination number with non-bridging oxygen sites and reduces the overall stability of the network structure. The fraction of non-bridging oxygen sites in the vicinity of Gd3+ ions increases considerably with decreasing field strength and increasing concentration of the network modifier ions. These correlations could be confirmed even if the simulation results of alkaline earth aluminosilicate glasses are added to the analysis. In addition, the structure predictions generally indicate a low driving force for the clustering of Gd3+. Here, network modifier ions of large ionic radii reduce the probability of Gd–O–Gd contacts.

Highlights

  • Aluminosilicate glasses based on alkali or alkaline earth aluminosilicates find a wide range of technical applications

  • The systems are composed of an aluminosilicate network with tetrahedrally coordinated Si and Al atoms connected by bridging oxygen atoms

  • 2 3 aluminosilicate glasses containing K2 O and Li2 O was investigated by using molecular dynamics simulations

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Aluminosilicate glasses based on alkali or alkaline earth aluminosilicates find a wide range of technical applications. The crystallization of crystal phases such as β-quartz, spodumene, and eucryptite occurs which all exhibit a negative coefficient of thermal expansion [3] Another important field of application of aluminosilicate glasses is high strength glass-ceramics in the system MgO/Al2 O3 /SiO2 [4,5]. Most important are the low coefficients of thermal expansion (CTE) and their higher mechanical strength, their high hardness, and last but not least their high toughness [7,8], which all contribute to a higher laser damage threshold This has been shown for Yb3+ doped aluminosilicate glasses as compared to phosphate or fluoride phosphate glasses and even to monocrystalline CaF2 [9]. This effect has so far been observed for Sm3+ , Eu3+ , Dy3+ and Tb3+ doped glasses [10,11,12,13,14,15]

Objectives
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call