Journal of the Ceramic Society of Japan
Online ISSN : 1348-6535
Print ISSN : 1882-0743
ISSN-L : 1348-6535

This article has now been updated. Please use the final version.

version.2
Unravelling the density-driven modification of the topology generated by the interconnection of SiO4 tetrahedra in silica polymorphs
Shinji KoharaShuya SatoMotoki ShigaYohei OnoderaHirokazu MasaiToru WakiharaAtsunobu MasunoAkihiko HirataNaoto KitamuraYasushi IdemotoKoji KimuraKoichi Hayashi
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JOURNAL OPEN ACCESS Advance online publication
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Article ID: 24093

version.2: October 24, 2024
version.1: September 27, 2024
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Abstract

The topology of materials is an important structural feature, which cannot be determined from crystallographic information in crystalline materials and pairwise correlations in disordered materials. We extracted the density-driven modification of the topology of tetrahedral silica (SiO2) crystals, siliceous zeolites (MFI, SOD, and FAU), and glass on the basis of the results of ring size, homology, cavity distribution, and tetrahedral order analyses. A series of analyses confirmed a universal feature that oxygen atoms are buckled in –Si–O– rings except in some symmetrical even-numbered rings such as twelvefold (Si–O)12 rings in coesite and SOD/FAU. In addition, large cavities were found in β-cristobalites and siliceous zeolites, whose cavity volume ratios are much higher than that of SiO2 glass. A comparison between α- and β-cristobalite indicated that the arrangement of oxygen atoms governs the formation of cavities. Moreover, a topological similarity between glass and MFI was found, in which fivefold and sevenfold rings are observed in the King ring size distribution. This feature can break their symmetry because these odd-number rings are not observed in other SiO2 polymorphs. Moreover, it was suggested that SiO2 glass is crystallographically an analogue to β-cristobalite in terms of the position of the diffraction peak, but topologically an analogue to MFI. It is demonstrated that the topological analyses provide us with crucial information for the design of novel nonequilibrium materials at high pressures and/or high temperatures by tuning density.

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