Incorporation of PbF2 into Heavy Metal Oxide Borate Glasses. Structural Studies by Solid State NMR


Autoria(s): Fernandes, Roger Gomes; Ren, Jinjun; Camargo, Andréa Simone Stucchi de; Hernandes, Antonio Carlos; Eckert, Hellmut
Contribuinte(s)

UNIVERSIDADE DE SÃO PAULO

Data(s)

27/09/2013

27/09/2013

2012

Resumo

A series of heavy metal oxide (HMO) glasses with composition 26.66B(2)O(3)-16GeO(2)-4 Bi2O3-(53.33-x)PbO-xPbF2 (0 <= x <= 40) were prepared and characterized with respect to their bulk (glass transition and crystallization temperatures, densities, molar volumes) and spectroscopic properties. Homogeneous glasses are formed up to x = 30, while crystallization of beta-PbF2 takes place at higher contents. Substitution of PbO by PbF2 shifts the optical band gap toward higher energies, thereby extending the UV transmission window significantly toward higher frequencies. Raman and infrared absorption spectra can be interpreted in conjunction with published reference data. Using B-11 and F-19 high-resolution solid state NMR as well as B-11/F-19 double resonance methodologies, we develop a quantitative structural description of this material. The fraction of four-coordinate boron is found to be moderately higher compared to that in glasses with the same PbO/B2O3 ratios, suggesting some participation of PbF2 in the network transformation process. This suggestion is confirmed by the F-19 NMR spectra. While the majority of the fluoride ions is present as ionic fluoride, similar to 20% of the fluorine inventory acts as a network modifier, resulting in the formation of four-coordinate BO3/2F- units. These units can be identified by F-19{B-11} rotational echo double resonance and B-11{F-19} cross-polarization magic angle spinning (CPMAS) data. These results provide the first unambiguous evidence of B-F bonding in a PbF2-modified glass system. The majority of the fluoride ions are found in a lead-dominated environment. F-19-F-19 homonuclear dipolar second moments measured by spin echo decay spectroscopy are quantitatively consistent with a model in which these ions are randomly distributed within the network modifier subdomain consisting of PbO, Bi2O3, and PbF2. This model, which implies both the features of atomic scale mixing with the network former borate species and some degree of fluoride ion clustering is consistent with all of the experimental data obtained on these glasses.

FAPESP

FAPESP

CNPq

CNPq

Identificador

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY C, WASHINGTON, v. 116, n. 10, pp. 6434-6445, 42064, 2012

1932-7447

http://www.producao.usp.br/handle/BDPI/33810

10.1021/jp212610g

http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp212610g

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

AMER CHEMICAL SOC

WASHINGTON

Relação

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY C

Direitos

restrictedAccess

Copyright AMER CHEMICAL SOC

Palavras-Chave #LEAD FLUOROBORATE GLASSES #DOUBLE-RESONANCE NMR #OPTICAL-PROPERTIES #SPIN-ECHO #PBO-BI2O3-B2O3 GLASSES #ATOMIC DISTRIBUTION #PHOSPHATE-GLASSES #IONIC TRANSPORT #LOCAL ORDER #SPECTROSCOPY #CHEMISTRY, PHYSICAL #NANOSCIENCE & NANOTECHNOLOGY #MATERIALS SCIENCE, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Tipo

article

original article

publishedVersion