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Temperature dependence of amber color generation in soda-lime-silica glass

2000, Müller-Simon, Hayo

Recently, spectroscopic investigations in the UV-VIS range showed that the amber chromophore in soda-lime-silica glass vanishes with increasing temperature. Oxygen balance calculations have been carried out in order to explain this behavior thermodynamically. The calculations yield that, based on the available standard reaction enthalpies and standard reaction entropies, the product of the ferric and sulfide concentrations decreases with increasing temperature.

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Redox behavior of selenium in industrial soda-lime-silica glasses

2001, Müller-Simon, Hayo, Bauer, Johannes, Baumann, Patrick

Α thermodynamic model for the calculation of the redox distributions of polyvalent elements which is based on the balance of chemically bonded oxygen in glass melts has been applied to the redox reactions of selenium. Α set of reliable thermodynamic data of the selenium oxidation reactions has been derived using results of electrochemical, optical and wet-chemical investigations. Calculation results showed that selenium is reduced during cooling by iron as well as by sulfur. Due to the small selenium/sulfur ratio in selenium-decolorized flint glasses under industrial conditions selenium is completely reduced to the selenide state. Obviously, in industrially melted flint glasses selenium decolorization is not provided by the pink color of elemental selenium as assumed so far but by the amber color of iron selenide, which is supported by the fact that selenium decolorization always causes an additional yellow tint besides the required red tint and a considerable shift of the UV edge to larger wavelengths.