Silicon oxycarbide glasses: Part II. Structure and properties
- 1 December 1991
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Journal of Materials Research
- Vol. 6 (12) , 2723-2734
- https://doi.org/10.1557/jmr.1991.2723
Abstract
Silicon oxycarbide glass is formed by the pyrolysis of silicone resins and contains only silicon, oxygen, and carbon. The glass remains amorphous in x-ray diffraction to 1400 °C and shows no features in transmission electron micrographs (TEM) after heating to this temperature. After heating at higher temperature (1500–1650 °C) silicon carbide lines develop in x-ray diffraction, and fine crystalline regions of silicon carbide and graphite are found in TEM and electron diffraction. XPS shows that silicon-oxygen bonds in the glass are similar to those in amorphous and crystalline silicates; some silicons are bonded to both oxygen and carbon. Carbon is bonded to either silicon or carbon; there are no carbon-oxygen bonds in the glass. Infrared spectra are consistent with these conclusions and show silicon-oxygen and silicon-carbon vibrations, but none from carbon-oxygen bonds. 29Si-NMR shows evidence for four different bonding groups around silicon. The silicon oxycarbide structure deduced from these results is a random network of silicon-oxygen tetrahedra, with some silicons bonded to one or two carbons substituted for oxygen; these carbons are in turn tetrahedrally bonded to other silicon atoms. There are very small regions of carbon-carbon bonds only, which are not bonded in the network. This “free” carbon colors the glass black. When the glass is heated above 1400 °C this network composite rearranges in tiny regions to graphite and silicon carbide crystals. The density, coefficient of thermal expansion, hardness, elastic modulus, index of refraction, and viscosity of the silicon oxycarbide glasses are all somewhat higher than these properties in vitreous silica, probably because the silicon-carbide bonds in the network of the oxycarbide lead to a tighter, more closely packed structure. The oxycarbide glass is highly stable to temperatures up to 1600 °C and higher, because oxygen and water diffuse slowly in it.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Silicon oxycarbide glasses: Part I. Preparation and chemistryJournal of Materials Research, 1991
- Synthesis and Characterization of Silicon Oxycarbide GlassesJournal of the American Ceramic Society, 1990
- Dimethyldiethoxysilane/tetraethoxysilane copolymers: precursors for the silicon-carbon-oxygen systemChemistry of Materials, 1989
- Oxycarbide Glasses in the Mg‐Al‐Si‐O‐C SystemJournal of the American Ceramic Society, 1988
- Structure and chemistry of fibre-matrix interfaces in silicon carbide fibre-reinforced glass-ceramic composites: an electron microscopy studyJournal of Materials Science, 1987
- Oxynitride GlassesAnnual Review of Materials Science, 1986
- Synthesis of continuous silicon carbide fibre with high tensile strength and high Young's modulusJournal of Materials Science, 1978
- On two methods of determination of particle size distribution functions by means of small-angle X-ray scatteringJournal of Applied Crystallography, 1976
- Increase of Annealing Point of 96% SiO2 Glass on Incorporation of CarbonJournal of the American Ceramic Society, 1976
- Crystallization and Melting Kinetics of CristobaliteJournal of the American Ceramic Society, 1969