4.7 Article

Partitioning and structural role of Mn and Fe ions in ionic sulfophosphate glasses

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 141, Issue 22, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/1.4903191

Keywords

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Funding

  1. German Science Foundation (DFG) [WO 1220/6-1]
  2. ERA.Net RUS (EU) [AN2]
  3. General Secretariat for Research and Technology (Greece)

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Ionic sulfophosphate liquids of the type ZnO-Na2O-Na2SO4-P2O5 exhibit surprising glass forming ability, even at slow or moderate cooling rate. As a concept, they also provide high solubility of transition metal ions which could act as cross-linking sites between the sulfate and phosphate entities. It is therefore investigated how the replacement of ZnO by MnO and/or FeO affects the glass structure and the glass properties. Increasing manganese levels are found to result in a monotonic increase of the transition temperature T-g and most of the mechanical properties. This trend is attributed to the change of metal-ion coordination from four-fold around Zn2+ to six-fold around Mn2+ ions. The higher coordination facilitates cross-linking of the ionic structural entities and subsequently increases T-g. Raman and infrared spectroscopy show that the structure of these glasses involves only SO42- and PO43- monomers as well as P2O7 4-dimers. Replacement of ZnO by MnO is found to favour PO43- over P2O74- species, a trend which is enhanced by co-doping with FeO. Both transition metal ions show, like Zn2+, a preference to selectively coordinate to phosphate anionic species, as opposed to sodium ions which coordinate mainly to sulfate anions. EPR spectroscopy finally shows that divalent Mn2+ ions are present primarily in MnO6-clusters, which, in the studied sulfophosphate glasses, convert upon increasing MnO content from corner-sharing to edge-sharing entities. (C) 2014 AIP Publishing LLC.

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