ISSN:
0570-0833
Keywords:
Glasses
;
Materials science
;
Chemistry
;
General Chemistry
Source:
Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
Topics:
Chemistry and Pharmacology
Notes:
A melt can readily solidify to a glass with a three-dimensional or two-dimensional network, or a chain structure, provided that an irregular bonding system can be formed by virtue of free rotation about the bonds between a central atom and the ligands which function as bridging atoms. Such an irregular structure can arise when the system contains a sufficient amount of bridging atoms such as O, F, and S, or bridging groups such as CH2, with bond angles less than 180°. When the network is formed predominantly by trivalent and tetravalent elements, such as As and Ge, the glasses - though they cannot be prepared by cooling of melts - can be obtained by other processes, e.g. by condensing the vaporized substances onto a surface (glasses in the wider sense of the word). As a result of extensive network formation, the bonding systems and, therefore, the short-range order of the atomic arrangement in the melt differ from those in the glass or the crystal. A liquid mixture of substances having unlike molecular size and shape also can form a glass on solidification. Moreover, glasses can be formed even when the systems contains only one component opposing regular packing into a crystal lattice.
Additional Material:
9 Ill.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/anie.196605441
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