1 / 17

Thermal stress & Chromatics

Thermal stress & Chromatics. Thermal stress & annealed glass. It is well-known that annealed glass can be vulnerable to thermal breakage when there is a differential in temperature across a sheet

nelly
Download Presentation

Thermal stress & Chromatics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Thermal stress & Chromatics

  2. Thermal stress & annealed glass • It is well-known that annealed glass can be vulnerable to thermal breakage when there is a differential in temperature across a sheet • If the temperature difference is too big, stress at the edge of the glass will eventually set off breakage

  3. Thermal stress & Chromatics Chromatics products resist thermal breakage in 3 ways • Under extreme stress Chromatics does not break, but may crack remaining glazed and in place • Increased design strength – the temperature difference at which Chromatics becomes at any risk is some 25% higher than for annealed glass • Stress relieving factor – the Chromatics process brings the temperature across a pane into equilibrium much more efficiently than a piece of opacified annealed glass, reducing the maximum difference experienced

  4. Safe breakage of Chromatics • Chromatics DOES NOT break! • Under extreme conditions it may crack, but will remain glazed, intact & safe until it can be replaced – even if replacement can not be effected immediately

  5. Stress Relieving FactorA characteristic of a material by which the stress induced in it’s surface is reduced when subjected to temperature differentials

  6. Stress Relieving Factor - Example • Consider a piece of opacified float glass, which is heated in a frame so that the calculated centre-edge difference is say 60°C • Annealed float glass has a SRF of 1.0 meaning that it does not modify the temperature differential at all • That is: actual temperature difference = 60 x 1.0

  7. SRF & Chromatics • Extensive work done at British Glass, in conjunction with NSG Pilkington and verified by independent specialist JB Waldron has established an SRF for Chromatics of 0.62 • This means that Chromatics is MORE efficient than annealed glass at bringing temperature differences into equilibrium

  8. Stress Relieving Factor - Example • Consider a piece of Chromatics, which is heated in a frame so that the calculated centre-edge difference is say 60°C • Chromatics has an SRF of 0.62 meaning that it modifies the temperature differential as shown below • Actual observed temperature difference = 60 x 0.62 = 37.2 °C

  9. Design strength Defined as that temperature below which 95% of panels of that type will not break in 95% of cases • Wired glass – 25 °C • Cast glass – 30 °C • Clear float glass – 40 °C • Heat-strengthened glass – 100 °C • Toughened glass – 200 °C

  10. Design strength & Chromatics • Determined using NSG Pilkington methods and analysis • Verified by independent specialist JB Waldron • Value = 50.5°C

  11. Ranking of design strengths • Wired glass – 25 °C • Cast glass – 30 °C • Clear float glass – 40 °C • Chromatics – 50.5°C • Heat-strengthened glass – 100 °C • Toughened glass – 200 °C

  12. What does this all mean? When considering whether a piece of glass will be thermally safe or at risk in a given location, orientation and application, several factors must first be considered • Type and thickness of the panel • Its size (larger panels are more at risk because they can build up greater stress levels) • Its aspect – does it face North or South, is it mounted vertically or at an angle? • Where is the panel mounted? What is the diurnal temperature range and the solar power at that location? • Its application – is it in a monolithic panel or double glazed? What type and colour frame is used? If a sealed unit, what gas filling has been used? Etc. • Its colour • Other factors – is the panel subject to a static, moving or no shadow? Are there mullions or canopies to consider? What is the temperature behind the panel? Is it insulated? Etc.

  13. What does this all mean? • From these factors, it is possible to calculate a theoretical temperature difference across a panel • This difference is modified using the value of SRF • The result is then compared to the design strength • If this is higher than the design strength, the panel is at risk of thermal damage – otherwise, it can be considered not at risk

  14. Example • In a given location and application, a panel of black Chromatics has a calculated temperature difference of 65°C • The SRF for Chromatics is 0.625, so that the actual temperature difference will be 65 x 0.625 = 40.6°C • This is lower than the design strength for Chromatics (50.5°C), so this panel should be considered NOT AT RISK

  15. Implications in the real world • OK – final calculated temperature likely to be below 45 °C • Calculation should be carried out – final calculated temperature likely to be between 45 - 48°C • Calculation should be undertaken with particular reference to static shadow – final calculated temperature likely to be 48 - 52 °C

  16. Conclusions • Chromatics is a unique product – can be cut, is flat like annealed glass, but is not usually at any risk thermally • Chromatics does not break – in an extreme case it may crack, but remain safely glazed • Not at thermal risk in most European applications

  17. Supplement John Brian Waldron • Used to verify the calculations for Chromatics • Former European Technical & Standards Manager, Pilkington PLC • Chairman of various CEN & BSI committees • CV available on request

More Related