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Journal ArticleDOI

The structure of vitreous boron oxide

R. L. Mozzi, +1 more
- 01 Aug 1970 - 
- Vol. 3, Iss: 4, pp 251-257
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TLDR
In this article, a new study of the structure of vitreous boron oxide has been made under greatly improved conditions, using Rh Kα radiation with the method of fluorescence excitation, reliable intensity values were measured to 4πsinθ/λ = 20
Abstract
A new study of the structure of vitreous boron oxide has been made under greatly improved conditions. Using Rh Kα radiation with the method of fluorescence excitation, reliable intensity values were measured to 4πsinθ/λ = 20 A−1, and a rigorous interpretation was obtained in terms of pair functions. Each boron is triangularly surrounded by 3 oxygen atoms with a B–O distance of 1.37 A. Each oxygen atom is bonded to 2 boron atoms. The major part of the glass is made up of boroxol groups B3O6 (a hexagonal ring of 3 boron atoms and 3 oxygen atoms with 3 corner oxygen atoms outside the ring). These groups are linked together by sharing the corner oxygen atoms, with randomness in orientation about the B–O bond directions at the shared oxygen atoms. Within the ring the B–O–B angle is 120° and at the shared oxygen it is approximately 130°. There is satisfactory agreement between the calculated and measured pair function distribution curves. In vitreous B2O3 the scheme of bonding does not fill space, and any boroxol group has neighboring groups which are not directly connected to it by B–O and O–B bonds. The measured pair function areas indicate neutral atoms, so that the bonding is predominantly covalent.

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Citations
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Preparation of High-Porosity B-TiO2/C3N4 Composite Materials: Adsorption–Degradation Capacity and Photo-Regeneration Properties

TL;DR: In this article , B-TiO2/g-C3N4 composite materials were prepared by molten method, and their adsorption-degradation capability under visible light conditions was discussed.
Book ChapterDOI

Inorganic Amorphous Solids and Glass-Ceramic Materials

TL;DR: A liquid can solidify in either of two ways: it can form a crystalline solid, in which the molecules are regularly arranged on a lattice; or it can be an amorphous solid, called a glass as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular Dynamics Investigation on Microstructure and Void in Amorphous SiO2

TL;DR: In this paper, a molecular dynamics simulation was performed to study the microstructure and void distribution in amorphous SiO2, where two void aggregations were considered: void clusters (VCs) and void tubes (VTs).
Journal ArticleDOI

Modern possibilities and some new results of studying the structure of inorganic glasses by diffraction methods

TL;DR: In this paper, the structural parameters for the short-, middle-, and long-range order in inorganic glasses were calculated using X-ray scattering diffraction curves at large (LAXS), mean (MAXS), and small (SAXS) angles.
Journal ArticleDOI

The structure of vitreous b2o3 obtained from a thermostatistical model of agglomeration

TL;DR: In this paper, a thermostatistical model of the formation of vitreous B 2 O 3 is presented, which is based on the description of agglomeration of BO 3 clusters and on the construction of the partition function related to the space of all possible pathways leading to a set of aggregates.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

X-Ray Diffraction

Kathleen Lonsdale
- 01 Oct 1971 - 
TL;DR: Lipson and Steeple as mentioned in this paper interpreted X-ray powder diffraction patterns and found that powder-diffraction patterns can be represented by a set of 3-dimensional planes.
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