4.7 Article

Origin of Rayleigh scattering and anomaly of elastic properties in vitreous and molten GeO2

Journal

JOURNAL OF NON-CRYSTALLINE SOLIDS
Volume 354, Issue 26, Pages 3049-3058

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jnoncrysol.2007.12.008

Keywords

acoustic properties; ultrasonic relaxation; Brillouin scattering; optical fibers; glass melting; germania; germanates; fluctuations; structural relaxation

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Vitreous (v) and molten (m) GeO2 were studied by Rayleigh and Mandel'shtam-Brillouin scattering spectroscopy and high-temperature acoustics. Original measurement apparatus and procedure were used that included Bayseian deconvolution of light scattering spectra of vGeO(2) and a specially designed high-temperature (up to 1500 degrees C) acoustic interferometer to measure temperature and frequency dependence of ultrasonic (US) velocity and attenuation in mGeO(2). Landau-Placzek ratios for vGeO(2) were found optically (from the light scattering spectrum) and acoustically (through the Schroeder's formalism). Dispersion of optical and other physical parameters of vGeO(2) found by many authors is explained by the existence of small amount of GeO in the samples. It means that properties of vGeO(2) are under the influence of redox synthesis conditions controlling the GeO2 <-> GeO and coordination [GeO4] <-> [GeO6] equilibrium in vGeO(2), Measurements of temperature dependencies of longitudinal ultrasonic velocities in mGeO(2) and in the PbO-GeO2 glass melts as a function of PbO concentration shows existence of 'water-like anomaly' in mGeO(2) and in liquid germanates with the rich content of GeO2 where equilibrium sound velocity increases with the temperature. (C) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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