Claims
- 1. In a melter for melting glass from batch material therein in which the batch material is floated on top of a pool of molten glass and the batch is melted by heating means so located as to form a finite volume of molten glass within said pool of molten glass, which finite volume is at a temperature substantially higher than the remainder of the molten glass within said pool, said melter including a side wall and a bottom wall and a discharge port located within at least one of said walls, the improvement comprising, wherein:
said heating means are so located as to create said finite volume of substantially higher temperature at a spaced distance from said walls and any said discharge orifice located in said walls whereby said walls and any said discharge orifice wear out at substantially the same time during melting of glass in the melter.
- 2. The melter according to claim 1 wherein said heating means includes a plurality of electrodes locatable within said pool of molten glass.
- 3. The melter according to claim 2 wherein said heating means further includes means for adjusting the vertical location of said electrodes within said pool of molten glass.
- 4. The melter according to claim 3 wherein said heating means further includes means for adjusting the horizontal location of said electrodes within said pool of molten glass.
- 5. The melter according to claim 1 wherein said heating means further includes means for adjusting the horizontal location of said electrodes within said pool of molten glass.
- 6. The melter according to claim 1 wherein said melter is substantially cylindrical in shape and has a vertical central axis and further includes an open top, and wherein said heating means includes a plurality of electrodes located so as to extend below said batch material and into said pool of molten glass and so arranged as to be located in an array around and proximal said vertical central axis of said cylindrical melter.
- 7. The melter according to claim 6 wherein said electrodes are arranged in a substantially horizontally circular array, with the center of said circular array being located along the vertical central axis of said cylindrical melter.
- 8. The melter according to claim 7 wherein the radius of said cylindrical melter is about 3 times larger than the radius of said circular array.
- 9. The melter according to claim 7 wherein said heating means further includes means for adjusting the vertical and horizontal positions of each said electrode with respect to said pool of said molten glass.
- 10. The melter according to claim 1 wherein said melter includes a water-cooled shell and a walled structure having a said side wall joined at its base to a substantially circular said bottom wall thereby to define a substantially cylindrical electric melter, the walled structure having an open top so that atmosphere above the glass batch material is not heated other than by way of heat emitted from heated glass in said melter; wherein said at least one discharge port is located in a said side wall of said melter, said port permitting molten glass from within the melter to flow out of the melter and into a conditioning area;
wherein said side discharge port includes an elongated tube comprised of a substantially corrosion resistant metal, and having an entrance end and an exit end thereby to define a molten glass flow communication path between an interior of the melter and the conditioning area and wherein said entrance end of said tube is so located as to be spaced from said finite volume of molten glass of substantially high temperature and proximal the remainder of said volume of molten glass; and wherein said discharge port tube is comprised of a material which has a rate of corrosion which increases with temperature.
- 11. The melter according to claim 10 wherein said melter further includes a discharge port in said bottom wall of said melter, said discharge port in said bottom wall is comprised of a material which has a rate of corrosion which increases with temperature.
- 12. The melter according to claim 1 wherein said heating means are so located and constructed so as to heat the molten glass within said finite volume of highest temperature to about 3150° F.-3250° F. and proximal said bottom and side walls of said melter to about 2500° F.-2700° F.
- 13. The melter according to claims 1, 11 or 12 wherein said heating means include a plurality of electrodes and means for adjusting said electrodes horizontally and vertically with respect to said walls of said melter thereby to locate said finite volume of higher temperature molten glass at a preselected location within said melter.
- 14. In the method of melting glass in a melter which includes a bottom wall, a side wall and at least one discharge port located in a said wall and comprised of a corrosion resistant material whose corrosion rate increases with temperature, the steps comprising, forming a molten pool of glass within said melter, floating batch material on top of said molten pool, melting said batch material so as to add further molten glass to said pool, discharging molten glass from said melter through a said discharge port and during said melting of said glass batch material creating within said pool a finite volume of molten glass within said pool which is at a significantly higher temperature than the remainder of the molten glass within the pool, the improvement which comprises forming said finite volume of said higher temperature molten glass at a location sufficiently removed from said walls and said discharge port such that said walls and discharge port wear out at substantially the same time.
- 15. The method according to claim 14 which further includes the steps of:
a) operating said melter for a period of time until at least one of said walls or discharge port requires replacement; b) stopping said melting of said glass; c) draining said molten glass from said melter; d) replacing said walls and said discharge port; and, thereafter, e) melting further glass in said melter.
- 16. The method of claim 14 wherein the temperature of said finite volume of said higher temperature molten glass is about 3150° F.-3250° F.
- 17. The method of claim 16 wherein the temperature at said walls and proximal said discharge port is about 2500° F.-2700° F.
- 18. The method of claim 14 wherein said melter further includes electrical heating means and means for adjusting the location of said heating means with respect to said pool of molten glass, said method including the further step of adjusting the location of said heating means so as to locate said finite volume of higher temperature glass at a selected location within said pool of molten glass.
- 19. The method of claim 14 wherein said melter includes at least two discharge ports, one of said ports being located in said side wall and the other of said ports being located in said bottom wall, and wherein each of said ports is formed of a material which comprises molybdenum or an alloy thereof.
- 20. In the combination of a walled melter, a walled conditioning system having at least one heating element extending through an orifice in a wall thereof and a forehearth, said melter being connected in molten glass flow communication with said conditioning system through a discharge port located in a wall of said melter at a first end of said conditioning system and said opposite end of said conditioning system being connected in molten glass flow communication with said forehearth, the improvement comprising at least one removable heating element extending through said orifice in a wall thereof and exhaust means proximal said orifice for exhausting corrosive volatiles from above said molten glass in said conditioning system through the orifice when said removable heating element is removed therefrom.
- 21. The combination of claim 20 wherein said conditioning system has an entrance end for receiving molten glass from said melter, and said discharge port is in flow communication with said entrance end of said conditioning system thereby forming a juncture between said melter and said conditioning system, the combination further comprising a second exhaust system at said juncture for exhausting corrosive volatiles during the glass melting and conditioning operation.
- 22. The combination of claim 21 wherein said melter further includes means for providing batch material on top of said molten glass when in said melter so as to float on said molten glass in a layer thereon.
- 23. In the method of melting, conditioning and distributing molten glass wherein said method includes the steps of providing in serial flow communication, a melter, a walled conditioner and a forehearth array, melting glass in said melter, delivering molten glass from said melter to said conditioner, providing at least one heating means located in an orifice in a wall of said conditioner, delivering said molten glass from said conditioner to said forehearth and distributing said molten glass from said forehearth, wherein the method further includes the step of removing a substantial portion of said corrosive volatiles from the atmosphere above the glass before they reach the forehearth, the improvement comprising, removing at least one of said heating means from its respective orifice, thereby to provide an open orifice in a wall of said conditioner, providing an exhaust means in exhaust functioning communication with respect to said open orifice, and exhausting corrosive volatiles from said conditioner through said open orifice.
- 24. The method of claim 23 wherein said method further includes the step of providing batch material on top of the molten glass in said melter.
- 25. In a system for melting glass which includes a glass melter, a conditioner, and a forehearth wherein said glass melter is so constructed to discharge molten glass to said conditioner, wherein said conditioner is so constructed as to allow molten glass to flow through said conditioner to said forehearth and enter said forehearth at a lower temperature than the molten glass entered said conditioner, the improvement comprising a glass flow diverting structure so located so as to extend into said flow of molten glass in said conditioner so as to divert molten surface glass into molten glass beneath said molten surface glass.
- 26. The improvement according to claim 25 wherein said conditioner includes a top wall and glass flow diverting structure includes a walled structure extending downwardly from said top wall and of sufficient length so as to extend into said molten glass a sufficient distance to substantially equalize the depthwise temperature of the glass at any given location of the conditioner thereby to reduce crystallization of said glass in said conditioner.
- 27. The improvement according to claim 26 wherein said glass diverting structure includes means for cooling said structure.
RELATED APPLICATION
[0001] This application is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 08/917,207 filed Aug. 25, 1997, now U.S. Pat. No. ______.
Divisions (2)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
09540037 |
Mar 2000 |
US |
Child |
09824700 |
Apr 2001 |
US |
Parent |
09342224 |
Jun 1999 |
US |
Child |
09540037 |
Mar 2000 |
US |
Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
08917207 |
Aug 1997 |
US |
Child |
09342224 |
Jun 1999 |
US |