Stress And Volume Relaxation In Annealing Flat Glass.

Laboratory simulation of the industrial process of annealing sheet glass has yielded data on the genesis of stresses in initially stress free glass. The experimental results differed from expectations based on classical annealing theory in that stresses began to develop in the annealing range even when the glass was being cooled at a constant rate. i.e even in the absence of any changes of temperature gradients within the glass. Typically, these stresses account for 40% of the total residual stress in glass annealed according to a linear schedule. The remaining 60% are the well known thermoelastic stresses that arise later in the annealing process from the decay of temperature gradients in the glass. The stresses observed to arise in glass as it is being cooled at a constant rate are attributed to volume relaxation effects which in parts of the annealing range generate stresses rapidly enough that they are not dissipated by stress relaxation. A mathematical model of annealing is proposed that takes account of both stress and structural relaxation.

Author
R Gardon And Os Narayanaswamy
Origin
Unknown
Journal Title
J.A,.Ceram.Coc., 53 7 1970 380-5
Sector
Primary Papers
Class
PP 1496

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Stress And Volume Relaxation In Annealing Flat Glass.
J.A,.Ceram.Coc., 53 7 1970 380-5
PP 1496
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