9 research outputs found
Thermodynamic parameters of bonds in glassy materials from viscosity-temperature relationships
Doremus's model of viscosity assumes that viscous flow in amorphous materials is mediated by broken bonds (configurons). The resulting equation contains four coefficients, which are directly related to the entropies and enthalpies of formation and motion of the configurons. Thus by fitting this viscosity equation to experimental viscosity data these enthalpy and entropy terms can be obtained. The non-linear nature of the equation obtained means that the fitting process is non-trivial. A genetic algorithm based approach has been developed to fit the equation to experimental viscosity data for a number of glassy materials, including SiO2, GeO2, B2O3, anorthite, diopside, xNa2O–(1-x)SiO2, xPbO–(1-x)SiO2, soda-lime-silica glasses, salol, and α-phenyl-o-cresol. Excellent fits of the equation to the viscosity data were obtained over the entire temperature range. The fitting parameters were used to quantitatively determine the enthalpies and entropies of formation and motion of configurons in the analysed systems and the activation energies for flow at high and low temperatures as well as fragility ratios using the Doremus criterion for fragility. A direct anti-correlation between fragility ratio and configuron percolation threshold, which determines the glass transition temperature in the analysed materials, was found
Composition, nanostructure, and optical properties of silver and silver-copper lusters
Lusters are composite thin layers of coinage metal nanoparticles in glass displaying peculiar optical
properties and obtained by a process involving ionic exchange, diffusion, and crystallization. In
particular, the origin of the high reflectance (golden-shine) shown by those layers has been subject of
some discussion. It has been attributed to either the presence of larger particles, thinner multiple
layers or higher volume fraction of nanoparticles. The object of this paper is to clarify this for which
a set of laboratory designed lusters are analysed by Rutherford backscattering spectroscopy,
transmission electron microscopy, x-ray diffraction, and ultraviolet-visible spectroscopy. Model
calculations and numerical simulations using the finite difference time domain method were also
performed to evaluate the optical properties. Finally, the correlation between synthesis conditions,
nanostructure, and optical properties is obtained for these materials
Computational Modeling of Silicate Glasses: A Quantitative Structure-Property Relationship Perspective
This article reviews the present state of Quantitative Structure-Property
Relationships (QSPR) in glass design and gives an outlook into future developments.
First an overview is given of the statistical methodology, with particular emphasis
to the integration of QSPR with molecular dynamics simulations to derive informative
structural descriptors. Then, the potentiality of this approach as a tool for
interpretative and predictive purposes is highlighted by a number of recent inspiring
applications