| Literature DB >> 31790218 |
Jean-Paul Laval1, Jean-René Duclère1, Vincent Couderc2, Mathieu Allix3, Cécile Genevois3, Vincent Sarou-Kanian3, Franck Fayon3, Pierre-Eugène Coulon4, Sébastien Chenu1, Maggy Colas1, Julie Cornette1, Philippe Thomas1, Gaëlle Delaizir1.
Abstract
Crystallization from glass can lead to the stabilization of metastable crystalline phases, which offers an interesting way to unveil novel compounds and control the optical properties of resulting glass-ceramics. Here, we report on a crystallization study of the ZrF4-TeO2 glass system and show that under specific synthesis conditions, a previously unreported Te0.47Zr0.53OxFy zirconium oxyfluorotellurite antiglass phase can be selectively crystallized at the nanometric scale within the 65TeO2-35ZrF4 amorphous matrix. This leads to highly transparent glass-ceramics in both the visible and near-infrared ranges. Under longer heat treatment, the stable cubic ZrTe3O8 phase crystallizes in addition to the previous unreported antiglass phase. The structure, microstructure, and optical properties of 65TeO2-35ZrF4Tm3+-doped glass-ceramics, were investigated in detail by means of X-ray diffraction, scanning and transmission electron microscopies, and 19F, 91Zr, and 125Te NMR, Raman, and photoluminescence spectroscopies. The crystal chemistry study of several single crystals samples by X-ray diffraction evidence that the novel phase, derived from α-UO3 type, corresponds in terms of long-range ordering inside this basic hexagonal/trigonal disordered phase (antiglass) to a complex series of modulated microphases rather than a stoichiometric compound with various superstructures analogous to those observed in the UO3-U3O8 subsystem. These results highlight the peculiar disorder-order phenomenon occurring in tellurite materials.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31790218 DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.9b01955
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Inorg Chem ISSN: 0020-1669 Impact factor: 5.165