Basicity or Ionicity – A New Approach for Understanding Glass Properties

2008 ◽  
Vol 39-40 ◽  
pp. 129-134
Author(s):  
Adrian Volceanov

Basicity of glass is still a challenge in spite of various attempts to measure or calculate it. The values assigned for basicity of glasses, either calculated or experimentally determined, are not always in full agreement with actual facts, and discrepancies among the theoretical ones are not unusual. For instance, SiO2 is described by a single basicity value even if the polymorphs of SiO2 are quite different. Only few attempts were made to face this challenge. Present paper deals with a novel approach on theoretical ionicity / basicity based on electronic energy levels or band structure of solids. Another major adjustment takes into account the possibility of decomposing ionicity of complex chemical bondings into a sum of binary bondings. Considering the distribution of the interbonding angles specific for vitreous systems, it is possible to estimate both a local ionicity (basicity) of bondings and a global (mean) basicity of glass. The variation of basicity (ionicity) with temperature is also presented, this finding being able to open a new view on thermal history of glass considered through chemical character of bondings.

The system of bands in the visible region of the emission spectrum of magnesium hydride is now well known. The bands with heads at λλ 5622, 5211, 4845 were first measured by Prof. A. Fowler, who arranged many of the strongest lines in empirical series for identification with absorption lines in the spectra of sun-spots. Later, Heurlinger rearranged these series in the now familiar form of P, Q and R branches, and considered them, with the OH group, as typical of doublet systems in his classification of the fine structure of bands. More recently, W. W. Watson and P. Rudnick have remeasured these bands, using the second order of a 21-foot concave grating, and have carried out a further investigation of the fine structure in the light of the present theory of band spectra. Their detection of an isotope effect of the right order of magnitude, considered with the general structure of the system, and the experimental work on the production of the spectrum, seems conclusive in assigning these bands to the diatomic molecule MgH. The ultra-violet spectrum of magnesium hydride is not so well known. The band at λ 2430 and the series of double lines in the region λ 2940 to λ 3100, which were recorded by Prof. Fowler in 1909 as accompanying the group of bands in the visible region, appear to have undergone no further investigation. In view of the important part played by hydride band spectra in the correlation of molecular and atomic electronic energy levels, it was thought that a study of these features might prove of interest in yielding further information on the energy states of the MgH molecule. The present paper deals with observations on the band at λ 2430; details of an investigation of the other features of the ultra-violet spectrum will be given in a later communication.


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