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Carrie L. Hogue

Researcher at Corning Inc.

Publications -  9
Citations -  439

Carrie L. Hogue is an academic researcher from Corning Inc.. The author has contributed to research in topics: Glass transition & Laboratory flask. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 9 publications receiving 346 citations.

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Topological principles of borosilicate glass chemistry.

TL;DR: This paper presents a two-state statistical mechanical model of boron speciation in which addition of network modifiers leads to a competition between the formation of nonbridging oxygen and the conversion ofboron from trigonal to tetrahedral configuration, and derives a detailed topological representation of alkali-alkaline earth-borosilicate glasses that enables the accurate prediction of properties such as glass transition temperature, liquid fragility, and hardness.
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Structure of boroaluminosilicate glasses: Impact of [Al2O3]/[SiO2] ratio on the structural role of sodium

TL;DR: In this article, Zheng et al. proposed a method to solve the problem of glass and ceramics in Shandong Polytechnic University, Jinan, China by using graph theory.
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Network Glasses Under Pressure: Permanent Densification in Modifier-Free Al2O3−B2O3−P2O5−SiO2 Systems

TL;DR: In this article, the role of atomic structure in opposing densification of quaternary glass has been investigated, and it is shown that crack resistance can be controlled at the atomic scale.
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Glass-activated regeneration of volumetric muscle loss.

TL;DR: In vitro models demonstrate the ability of ions released from bioactive glasses in promoting angiogenesis and stimulating cells to secrete critical muscle-related growth factors and show the activation of SCs and the regeneration of skeletal muscles in a rat VML model.
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Integrated Approach to Studying the Development and Final Network Properties of Urethane Acrylate Coatings

TL;DR: In this article, an integrated approach involving the use of a number of analytical techniques was used to study polymer coating network development during photopolymerization of a series of fast reacting, low modulus coating formulations containing urethane/acrylate oligomers and acrylic comonomers.