Thermal fracturing in glass

Thermal fracturing in glass occurs when sufficient temperature differential is created within glass.[1] As a warmed area expands or a cooled area contracts, stress forces develop potentially leading to fracture. A temperature differential may be created in many ways including solar heating, space heating devices, fire, hot and cold liquids. Sloping glass surfaces are subject to greater solar radiation than vertical surfaces and so are more prone to solar thermal fracture. In framed window glass the edges are relatively cooler than the exposed areas so space heating devices in very close proximity may cause thermal fracture.

Factors affecting thermal stress

Different types of thermal fracture

Prevention of thermal fracture

References

  1. Technical note no: 65 "Centre For Window and Cladding Technology"
  2. Thermal Stress And ThermalFracture "Viridian Glass"
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, July 26, 2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.