{"title":"Partial molar volumes of metal oxides in silicate melts: Effects of Coulombic interactions","authors":"H. Nesbitt, P. Richet, G. Bancroft, G. Henderson","doi":"10.2475/05.2022.02","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Alkaline, alkaline earth, many 3d and most 4f modifier oxides dissolved in siliceous melts mix non-ideally with SiO2 to produce linear, density-compositional mixing trends from which partial molar volumes of modifier oxides (V*) are determined. An analysis of these experimental data reveals that the partial molar volumes of alkali, alkaline earths, most 4f and many 3d modifier oxides partial molar volumes are accurately reproduced by: where FC = (z+•z−)/d2 (Coulomb's Law) and z indicates charge. The bond length ‘d’ is the sum of the radii of the cation (M+, M2+, M3+ or M4+) and oxide ion (O2−) observed in ionic crystals. The coefficients ‘m’ and ‘b’ are 0.325 and 1.38 Å/atom respectively. Partial molar volumes of network-forming oxides also conform to the above equation where ‘m’ = ∼3.25 and ‘b’ is 1.68 Å/atom. Coulomb's force of attraction (FC) is the product of the cationic field strength (z+/d2) and the charge on an anion, where ‘d’ is the distance separating the centers of the two charges. In silicate melts containing modifier cations, apical O atoms of Si tetrahedra are negatively charged and are displaced toward the cations due to Coulombic attraction. The resulting collapse around the cations is referred to as ‘electrostriction’. Partial molar volumes (V*) of modifier oxides are thus composed of two terms, the volume of the polyhedron of the modifier cation (VPoly) and a volume associated with collapse of tetrahedra around the cation (VCol): VCol is negative for all modifier oxides and becomes increasingly negative with increased charge on the cation and with increased coordination number (CN). VPoly is itself composed of two terms, an intrinsic volume (VInt) and an excluded volume (VEx). The intrinsic volume can be calculated using cationic and O2− radii evaluated from ionic crystals. VEx reflects the state of packing around cationic polyhedra. It is equal to 6.83 Å3/atom for all modifier oxides so that the expression for VPoly is: A linear relationship exists between VPoly and VCol which results in the observed linear density-composition trends from which partial molar volumes are determined. In spite of their linearity, these trends are the result of non-ideal mixing of modifier oxide and SiO2 components in siliceous melts. Our finding that tetrahedra collapse around modifier cations differs from the traditional perspective where modifier cations were considered to occupy voids within the silicate network but otherwise had limited effect on melt structure. These results demonstrate that modifier cations affect the network substantially by causing surrounding tetrahedra to rotate, twist, tilt and flex during their collapse toward modifier cations.","PeriodicalId":7660,"journal":{"name":"American Journal of Science","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":1.9000,"publicationDate":"2022-05-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"American Journal of Science","FirstCategoryId":"89","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2475/05.2022.02","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"地球科学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"GEOSCIENCES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Alkaline, alkaline earth, many 3d and most 4f modifier oxides dissolved in siliceous melts mix non-ideally with SiO2 to produce linear, density-compositional mixing trends from which partial molar volumes of modifier oxides (V*) are determined. An analysis of these experimental data reveals that the partial molar volumes of alkali, alkaline earths, most 4f and many 3d modifier oxides partial molar volumes are accurately reproduced by: where FC = (z+•z−)/d2 (Coulomb's Law) and z indicates charge. The bond length ‘d’ is the sum of the radii of the cation (M+, M2+, M3+ or M4+) and oxide ion (O2−) observed in ionic crystals. The coefficients ‘m’ and ‘b’ are 0.325 and 1.38 Å/atom respectively. Partial molar volumes of network-forming oxides also conform to the above equation where ‘m’ = ∼3.25 and ‘b’ is 1.68 Å/atom. Coulomb's force of attraction (FC) is the product of the cationic field strength (z+/d2) and the charge on an anion, where ‘d’ is the distance separating the centers of the two charges. In silicate melts containing modifier cations, apical O atoms of Si tetrahedra are negatively charged and are displaced toward the cations due to Coulombic attraction. The resulting collapse around the cations is referred to as ‘electrostriction’. Partial molar volumes (V*) of modifier oxides are thus composed of two terms, the volume of the polyhedron of the modifier cation (VPoly) and a volume associated with collapse of tetrahedra around the cation (VCol): VCol is negative for all modifier oxides and becomes increasingly negative with increased charge on the cation and with increased coordination number (CN). VPoly is itself composed of two terms, an intrinsic volume (VInt) and an excluded volume (VEx). The intrinsic volume can be calculated using cationic and O2− radii evaluated from ionic crystals. VEx reflects the state of packing around cationic polyhedra. It is equal to 6.83 Å3/atom for all modifier oxides so that the expression for VPoly is: A linear relationship exists between VPoly and VCol which results in the observed linear density-composition trends from which partial molar volumes are determined. In spite of their linearity, these trends are the result of non-ideal mixing of modifier oxide and SiO2 components in siliceous melts. Our finding that tetrahedra collapse around modifier cations differs from the traditional perspective where modifier cations were considered to occupy voids within the silicate network but otherwise had limited effect on melt structure. These results demonstrate that modifier cations affect the network substantially by causing surrounding tetrahedra to rotate, twist, tilt and flex during their collapse toward modifier cations.
期刊介绍:
The American Journal of Science (AJS), founded in 1818 by Benjamin Silliman, is the oldest scientific journal in the United States that has been published continuously. The Journal is devoted to geology and related sciences and publishes articles from around the world presenting results of major research from all earth sciences. Readers are primarily earth scientists in academia and government institutions.