Density Functional Modeling and Total Scattering Analysis of the Atomic Structure of a Quaternary CaO-MgO-Al2O3-SiO2 (CMAS) Glass: Uncovering the Local Environment of Magnesium
Kai Gong, V. Ongun \"Oz\c{c}elik, Kengran Yang, Claire E. White

TL;DR
This study combines advanced computational modeling and experimental scattering data to elucidate the atomic structure of CMAS glass, revealing new insights into the roles of calcium and magnesium in its network structure.
Contribution
The paper introduces a combined force-field MD and DFT approach with scattering experiments to accurately determine the atomic structure of CMAS glass, resolving previous discrepancies.
Findings
Calcium acts as a charge compensator in CMAS glass.
Magnesium preferentially modifies the network and clusters.
Magnesium atoms are near free oxygen sites and tend to cluster.
Abstract
Quaternary CaO-MgO-Al2O3-SiO2 glasses are important constituents of the Earth's lower crust and mantle, and they also have important industrial applications such as in metallurgical processes, concrete production and emerging low-CO2 cement technologies. In particular, these applications rely heavily on the composition-structure-reactivity relationships for CMAS glasses, which are not yet well established. In this study, we developed a robust method that combines force-field molecular dynamics (MD) simulations and density functional theory (DFT) calculations with X-ray/neutron scattering experiments to resolve the atomic structure of a CMAS glass. The final structural representation generated using this method is not only thermodynamically favorable (according to DFT calculations) but also agrees with experiments (including X-ray/neutron scattering data as well as literature data).…
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