Boron anomaly in the thermal conductivity of lithium borate glasses

Søren Strandskov Sørensen, Hicham Johra, John C. Mauro, Mathieu Bauchy, Morten Mattrup Smedskjær*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

24 Citations (Scopus)
399 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Despite the importance of thermal conductivity for a range of modern glass applications, its compositional dependence and structural origins in modified oxide glasses remain poorly understood. In particular, the thermal conductivity of oxide glasses with network formers other than silica remain almost unexplored and no thorough connection with structural characteristics of glasses has been made. In this work, we study the thermal conductivity of binary lithium borate glasses using both experiments and classical molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. This glass system is chosen due to the nonmonotonic evolution in the boron coordination number as a function of composition and because glasses may be made in a wide compositional window. Specifically, we show that thermal conductivity exhibits a clear boron anomaly effect, as observed in both experiments and MD simulations. Thermal conduction is thus believed to mainly be promoted by the presence of fourfold coordinated boron. However, simulated vibrational density of states for the studied series suggests that the thermal conductivity is also influenced by the presence of the modifier ions based on an observed overlap between Li and O modes. Overall these results provide insights into the connection between thermal conductivity and structure of modified oxide glasses, which is the first step toward developing a model for predicting the composition dependence of thermal conductivity.

Original languageEnglish
Article number075601
JournalPhysical Review Materials
Volume3
Issue number7
Number of pages11
ISSN2476-0455
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jul 2019

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Boron anomaly in the thermal conductivity of lithium borate glasses'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this