The earliest experimental data on an oxygen-free glass have been
published by Schulz-Sellack in 1870 [1]. Later on, in 1902, Wood
[2], as well as Meier in 1910 [3], carried out the first researches
on the optical properties of vitreous selenium. The interest in the
glasses that exhibit transparency in the infrared region of the optical
spectrum rose at the beginning of the twentieth century. Firstly were
investigated the heavy metal oxides and the transparency limit was
extended from (the case of the classical oxide glasses) up to
wavelength. In order to extend this limit above the scientists tried the
chemical compositions based on the elements of the sixth group of the
Periodic Table, the chalcogens: sulphur, selenium and tellurium. The
systematic research in the field of glasses based on chalcogens, called
chalcogenide glasses, started at the middle of our century. In 1950
Frerichs [4] investigated the glass and published the paper: "New
optical glasses transparent in infrared up to 12 . Several years later
he started the study of the selenium glass and prepared several binary
glasses with sulphur [5]. Glaze and co-workers [6] developed in 1957
the first method for the preparation of the glass at the industrial
scale, while Winter-Klein [7] published reports on numerous
chalcogenides prepared in the vitreous state.