Structural Characterization of and Phase Separation in Vanadate Glasses
- 15 February 1968
- journal article
- conference paper
- Published by AIP Publishing in Journal of Applied Physics
- Vol. 39 (3) , 1634-1638
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1656407
Abstract
Structural characterization of vanadate glasses, an essential but often neglected step in studying physical properties of nonperiodic solids, has been carried out in the composition range 70.0–87.5 mole % V2O5, the remainder being P2O5, by bright‐field, dark‐field, and diffraction electron microscopy. Replicas and powdered chips of bulk samples gave inconclusive results, and thinning techniques were not attempted due to difficulties associated with the water solubility of the material. Blown, thin films were suitable for electron microscope study, any crystals occurring in the films being of dimension 20 Å or less and not readily detectable. Liquid‐liquid immiscible regions, possibly due to phase separation by the spinodal mechanism, were observed in the 87.5 mole % V2O5 films but not in films of other compositions.This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Transmission Electron Microscopy of Thin Glass SamplesJournal of the American Ceramic Society, 1967
- Structure and Mechanism of Conduction of Semiconductor GlassesJournal of the American Ceramic Society, 1965
- Phase Separation by Spinodal Decomposition in Isotropic SystemsThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1965
- Transmission Electron Microscopy of Glass‐CeramicsJournal of the American Ceramic Society, 1964
- Electrical Conductivity of Vanadium OxidesJournal of the Physics Society Japan, 1963
- Oxides of the 3dTransition Metals*Bell System Technical Journal, 1958
- Vanadate GlassesNature, 1954
- I. The Bakerian Lecture. - Researches on vanadiumPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, 1868