Artículos de revistas
Magnetic and optical investigation of 40SiO(2)center dot 30Na(2)O center dot 1Al(2)O(3)center dot(29-x) B2O3 center dot xFe(2)O(3) glass matrix
Fecha
2012Registro en:
SOLID STATE SCIENCES, AMSTERDAM, v. 14, n. 8, supl. 1, Part 2, pp. 1169-1174, AUG, 2012
1293-2558
10.1016/j.solidstatesciences.2012.05.033
Autor
Dantas, Noelio Oliveira
Ayta, Walter Elias Feria
Silva, Anielle C A
Mamani, Nilo Francisco Cano
Rodriguez, Anselmo F R
Oliveira, Aderbal C
Garg, Vijayendra K
Morais, Paulo C
Institución
Resumen
Samples of 40SiO(2)center dot 30Na(2)O center dot 1Al(2)O(3)center dot(29 - x)B2O3 center dot xFe(2)O(3) (mol%), with 0.0 <= x <= 17.5, were prepared by the fusion method and investigated by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), optical absorption (OA) and Mossbauer spectroscopy (MS). The EPR spectra of the as-synthesized samples exhibit two well-defined EPR signals around g = 4.27 and g = 2.01 and a visible EPR shoulder around g = 6.4, assigned to isolated Fe3+ ion complexes (g = 4.27 and g = 6.4) and Fe3+-based clusters (g = 2.01). Analyses of both EPR line intensity and line width support the model picture of Fe3+-based clusters built in from two sources of isolated ions, namely Fe2+ and Fe3+; the ferrous ion being used to build in iron-based clusters at lower x-content (below about x = 2.5%) whereas the ferric ion is used to build in iron-based clusters at higher x-content (above about x = 2.5%). The presence of Fe2+ ions incorporated within the glass template is supported by OA data with a strong band around 1100 nm due to the spin-allowed E-5(g)-T-5(2g) transition in an octahedral coordination with oxygen. Additionally, Mossbauer data (isomer shift and quadrupole splitting) confirm incorporation of both Fe2+ and Fe3+ ions within the template, more likely in tetrahedral-like environments. We hypothesize that ferrous ions are incorporated within the glass template as FeO4 complex resulting from replacing silicon in non-bridging oxygen (SiO3O-) sites whereas ferric ions are incorporated as FeO4 complex resulting from replacing silicon in bridging-like oxygen silicate groups (SiO4). (C) 2012 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.