Insight into the partitioning and clustering mechanism of rare-earth cations in alkali aluminoborosilicate glasses
Hrishikesh Kamat, Fu Wang, Kristian Barnsley, John V. Hanna, Alexei M., Tyryshkin, Ashutosh Goel

TL;DR
This study uses advanced spectroscopic techniques to analyze the coordination and clustering behavior of rare-earth ions in alkali aluminoborosilicate glasses, revealing mechanisms behind their structural roles and phase separation.
Contribution
It provides a detailed mechanistic model explaining the high clustering tendency of RE3+ ions in these glasses, combining multiple spectroscopic methods for comprehensive analysis.
Findings
RE3+ ions form isolated, dipole-coupled, and exchange-coupled clusters
High RE clustering occurs at concentrations as low as 0.01 mol%
RE clustering induces nano-scale phase separation and element depletion
Abstract
Rare-earth (RE) containing alkali aluminoborosilicate glasses find increasingly broad technological applications, with their further development only impeded by yet-poor understanding of coordination environment and structural role of RE ions in glasses. In this work we combine free induction decay (FID)-detected electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM), and MAS NMR spectroscopies, to examine the coordination environment and the clustering tendencies of RE3+ in a series of peralkaline aluminoborosilicate glasses co-doped with Nd2O3 (0.001-0.1 mol%) and 5 mol% La2O3. Quantitative EPR spectral analysis reveals three different Nd3+ forms coexisting in the glasses: isolated Nd3+ centers, dipole-coupled Nd clusters (Nd-O-X-O-Nd, where X = Si/B/Al), and spin-exchange-coupled Nd clusters, (Nd-O-Nd) and (Nd-O-La-O-Nd). Extensive RE clustering is…
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