Modeling vitreous silica bilayers
Mark Wilson, Avishek Kumar, David Sherrington, M.F. Thorpe

TL;DR
This paper models a vitreous silica bilayer using a computational assembly process starting from amorphous graphene, revealing structural flexibility and matching experimental structural data.
Contribution
It introduces a novel computational method to model vitreous silica bilayers and explores their structural flexibility and density range.
Findings
The modeled bilayer exhibits a network of corner sharing tetrahedra.
The density range aligns with the flexibility window concept from zeolites.
Structural characteristics match experimental imaging data.
Abstract
We computer model a free-standing vitreous silica bilayer which has recently been synthesized and characterized experimentally in landmark work. Here we model the bilayer using a computer assembly procedure that starts from a single layer of amorphous graphene, generated using a bond switching algorithm from an initially crystalline graphene structure. Next each bond is decorated with an oxygen atom and the carbon atoms are relabeled as silicon. This monolayer can be now thought of as a two dimensional network of corner sharing triangles. Next each triangle is made into a tetrahedron, by raising the silicon atom above each triangle and adding an additional singly coordinated oxygen atom at the apex. The final step is to mirror reflect this layer to form a second layer and then attach the two layers together to form the bilayer. We show that this vitreous silica bilayer has the…
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