Sheet glass laminate structure and mulitiple glass laminate structure

Abstract
A sheet glass laminate structure (10) is produced by laminating at least three sheet glasses (20) each having a thickness of less than 1 mm through an intermediate layer (30) between two adjacent sheet glasses. When a central portion of 20 mm in length including the middle point of a virtual line and opposite end portions respectively being 20 mm long from the opposite ends of the virtual line are set on the virtual line having a length equal to 50% of the maximum overall dimension of the translucent surface of the sheet glass (20) and extending in parallel with the direction of maximum overall dimension with the center of the translucent surface as its middle point, a maximum variation ΔHmax of the interval H between two adjacent sheet glasses opposed to each other through the intermediate layer in connection with the central portion and the opposite end portions satisfies a following relationship of 0 μm<ΔHmax<200 μm.
Description
TECHNICAL FIELD

The present invention relates to a sheet glass laminate structure to be utilized as, for example, a transparent window material having a high strength and high toughness which finds use in building applications, on-vehicle applications, or electronic part applications, and a multiple sheet glass laminate structure obtained by further laminating sheet glass laminate structures of the above kind.


A sheet glass has been finding use in a large number of applications because of its translucency. A sheet glass article provided with a variety of properties has been utilized as: a window sheet glass for various buildings or a windshield for a vehicle; an electronic part such as a display window for an image display apparatus such as a liquid crystal display apparatus or a plasma display; or a window material for various packages for storing electronic parts.


A large number of inventions have been heretofore made with a view to: realizing performance necessarily requested of a sheet glass from those various applications such as a reinforced structural strength or reinforced rigidity, improved heat insulating property or improved heat shock resistance, or improved transparency at a high level; or overcoming the drawbacks of the sheet glass.


For example, Patent Document 1 discloses a laminate obtained by joining a glass sheet to an acrylic resin surface through a polyvinyl butyral resin as a laminate having the following characteristics: the laminate can be suitably used as a window for buildings, a glass for doors, or a window glass for vehicles, has a light weight, and is excellent in heat insulating property and safety. In addition, Patent Document 2 discloses a nonshattering glass having the following structure as a window sheet glass intended for crime prevention: a copolymer of tetrafluoroethylene, hexafluoropropylene, and vinylidene fluoride is used as an intermediate film to be interposed between borosilicate glass sheets. In addition, Patent Document 3 discloses that the temperature of a polyvinyl butyral film or vinyl chloride-based resin film is held and controlled in the range of 10° C. to 50° C. in order that a glued-laminated nonshattering glass used as a window glass for automobiles may be utilized as a front windshield glass excellent in acoustic vibration resistance and sound-insulating performance. Further, Patent Document 4 discloses a crime-prevention, bulletproof composite glass that brings together bulletproof nature and a light weight, the composite glass being obtained by interposing an ethylene-vinyl acetate copolymer resin sheet crosslinked by high-frequency heating between glass sheets.

  • Patent Document 1: JP 06-99547 A
  • Patent Document 2: JP 2006-96612 A
  • Patent Document 3: JP 05-310450 A
  • Patent Document 4: JP 2003-252658 A


DISCLOSURE OF THE INVENTION
Problems to be Solved by the Invention

To deal with growing awareness in crime prevention resulting from, for example, a recent increase in number of crimes, various attempts have been made to improve additionally the performance of a window sheet glass for buildings and the like; from the viewpoint of an improvement in crime-preventing performance of a window sheet glass, various sheet glasses each having such performance as described above have been conventionally developed. The viewpoint of an improvement in resistance of any such sheet glass comprehends: an improvement in durability against an external physical stress such as an impact force; the adoption of such a structure that, even when the sheet glass breaks, the resultant chips can be prevented from scattering to cause disasters; and an improvement in resistance to a heat shock caused by a heating instrument such as a lighter or a burner.


However, a sheet glass laminate having additionally sophisticated functions and showing various properties has been demanded in recent years; a mere improvement in strength-related or thermal performance of a sheet glass does not suffice to meet such demand.


An object of the present invention is to provide a sheet glass laminate structure capable of meeting such demand as described above and excellent in shock resistance, crime prevention nature, heat shock resistance, translucency, and airtightness, and a multiple sheet glass laminate structure obtained by further laminating sheet glass laminate structures of the above kind.


Means for Solving the Problems

A sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention in a sheet glass laminate structure obtained by laminating at least three sheet glasses each having a thickness of less than 1 mm through an intermediate layer between two adjacent sheet glasses, characterized in that, when a central portion having a length of 20 mm and including a middle point of a virtual line which has a length equal to 50% of a maximum overall dimension of a translucent surface of each of the sheet glasses, which is parallel to a direction of the maximum overall dimension, and which adopts a center of the translucent surface as its middle point, and opposite end portions having lengths of 20 mm each from opposite ends of the virtual line are set on the virtual line, a maximum variation ΔHmax of an interval H between the two adjacent sheet glasses opposed to each other through the intermediate layer at each of the central portion and the opposite end portions satisfies a relationship of 0 μm<ΔHmax<200 μm.


Here, the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention is constituted by laminating at least three sheet glasses, so two or more intervals between the sheet glasses are formed in the direction in which the sheet glasses are laminated. However, at least the above interval H formed in closest proximity to one outermost layer of the sheet glass laminate structure has only to satisfy the relationship for the maximum variation ΔHmax of the above interval H, i.e., 0 μm<ΔHmax<200 μm. In addition, the term “center of a surface” means a geometrical center of gravity in one translucent surface.


The inventors of the present invention have conducted researches on a stress to be applied to a sheet glass structure in a state where sheet glasses are laminated. During the researches, the inventors have paid attention to the fact that the strength of the structure largely varies depending on how the sheet glasses are laminated. The inventors have provided a sheet glass laminate structure having unprecedented stability and capable of realizing a high strength in conformity with findings found on the basis of such understanding. That is, the sheet glass laminate structure can exert excellent durability against a stress to be applied to the structure, especially an external impact force on its translucent surface when the maximum variation ΔHmax of the above interval H 200 μm.


In the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention, an interval between laminated sheet glasses (the thickness of an intermediate layer) is observed to change. In addition, the inventors of the present invention have found that the change of the interval between the sheet glasses not only has a buffer action on the application of an external impact stress but also improves adhesiveness between each sheet glass and the intermediate layer. The inventors have hit upon an idea that the utilization of the nature enables the construction of a structure bringing together flexibility and high rigidity, and having shock resistance. That is, when the change of an interval between sheet glasses is periodically repeated in such state, an adhesive strength between each sheet glass and an intermediate layer becomes such that high resistance to an external force can be realized because of the following reason: the sheet glass and the intermediate layer not only are chemically bonded but also engaged with each other at their interface, an interfacial peeling threshold strength against a shear force occurring between the sheet glass and the intermediate layer during the deformation of the structure caused by an external force is improved, and the sheet glass and the intermediate layer serve to absorb an abrupt external force better than that in the case where they are completely parallel to each other. Further, the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention can realize the following two-stage elasticity: while the structure shows relatively small elasticity by virtue of a flexible deformation effect of an intermediate layer at a portion where an interval between laminated sheet glasses is large at the initial stage of the deformation of the structure due to the action of an external force, the structure shows relatively large elasticity by the application of the deformation resistance of the intermediate layer at a portion where a gap between the laminated sheet glasses is small when the deformation due to the action of the external force becomes large. In addition, such change of an interval between sheet glasses (the thickness of the intermediate layer) can be correctly managed by managing the maximum variation ΔHmax of the interval H at each of the central portion and the opposite end portions on the above virtual line. That is, each sheet glass of which the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention is constituted has a thickness of 1 mm or less, so the sheet glass has such structural elasticity that the sheet glass easily deflects along the direction of the maximum overall dimension of its translucent surface (for example, when the sheet glass has a longer side and a shorter side, the direction of the longer side). Therefore, the change of an interval between sheet glasses in the sheet glass laminate structure can be correctly managed by the maximum variation ΔHmax of the interval H at each of the central portion and the opposite end portions on the above virtual line because the change is significantly formed in the direction of the maximum overall dimension. In addition, specifying the maximum variation ΔHmax of the above interval H within the range of 0 μm to 200 μm can provide the sheet glass laminate structure having the above characteristics. As described above, the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention is a material having the following quite novel characteristics: the structure not only shows high resistance to an external force but also has nonlinear elasticity which changes in accordance with the advancement of the deformation of the structure.


The change of an interval between laminated sheet glasses (the thickness of the intermediate layer) is formed so as to have a period of, for example, 0.1 mm to 100 mm for an arbitrary straight-line region in the translucent surface of the sheet glass laminate structure. In the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention, the change of the interval may be formed by a repeating irregular shape called waviness present on one or both of the surfaces of the sheet glasses opposed to each other through the intermediate layer. Alternatively, the change may be formed by a method including deforming and solidifying only the surface of each sheet glass by a heat treatment involving secondary transfer such as rolling after the molding of the sheet glass. Alternatively, the change may be formed by a method including partially removing the surface of each sheet glass by, for example, a chemical treatment involving irradiation with laser or masking to form a repeating irregular structure on the translucent surface.


Further, the change of the interval between the sheet glasses (the thickness of the intermediate layer) can be managed with additionally high accuracy by defining an arbitrary (entire) region having a length of 20 mm on the above virtual line which is parallel to the direction of the maximum overall dimension and which adopts the center of the translucent surface as its middle point as a region where the above interval H is managed.


In a more preferred embodiment, the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention is a sheet glass laminate structure obtained by laminating at least three sheet glasses each having a thickness of less than 1 mm through an intermediate layer between two adjacent sheet glasses, in which, at a straight-line portion having a length of 20 mm arbitrarily on a virtual line which has a length equal to 50% of a maximum overall dimension of a translucent surface of each of the sheet glasses, which is parallel to a direction of the maximum overall dimension, and which adopts a center of the translucent surface as its middle point, a maximum variation ΔHmax of an interval H between the two adjacent sheet glasses opposed to each other through the intermediate layer satisfies a relationship of 0 μm<×Hmax<200 μm. In a still more preferred embodiment, the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention is a sheet glass laminate structure obtained by laminating at least three sheet glasses each having a thickness of less than 1 mm through an intermediate layer between two adjacent sheet glasses in which a maximum variation ΔHmax of an interval H between the two adjacent sheet glasses opposed to each other through the intermediate layer in a central region which has an area accounting for 40% or more of the area of the substantially rectangular translucent surface of each of the sheet glasses and which includes the geometrical center of gravity of the translucent surface satisfies the relationship of 0 μm<ΔHmax<200 μm for an arbitrary dimension of 20 mm parallel to the surface of each sheet glass.


However, when the maximum variation ΔHmax of the above interval H is 200 μm or more, the extent to which a light beam that has transmitted through the laminate structure is distorted in the translucent surface enlarges, with the result that the external appearance of the laminate structure deteriorates. On the other hand, when the maximum variation ΔHmax of the above interval H is 0 μm, an effect of the present invention is hardly obtained.


The extent to which a light beam that has transmitted through the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention deviates from the direction which the light beam will adopt when travelling in a straight line is preferably as small as possible when emphasis is placed on the optical performance of the sheet glass laminate structure. From such viewpoint, the maximum variation ΔHmax is preferably as small as possible. In order that the external appearance may be additionally sophisticated, the ΔHmax is preferably less than 180 μm, more preferably less than 150 μm, still more preferably less than 120 μm, still more preferably less than 100 μm, still more preferably less than 80 μm, or most preferably less than 50 μm. Meanwhile, the maximum variation ΔHmax is preferably large to some extent from the following viewpoint: the strength characteristics of the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention, that is, resistance to an external force and nonlinear elasticity should be sufficiently large. From such viewpoint, the ΔHmax is preferably larger than 0.1 μm, more preferably larger than 0.2 μm, still more preferably larger than 0.5 μm, still more preferably larger than 1 μm, still more preferably larger than 2 μm, still more preferably larger than 3 μm, still more preferably larger than 5 μm, or most preferably larger than 10 μm in order that additionally high strength characteristics may be realized. Of course, those upper and lower limits for the maximum variation ΔHmax are arbitrarily combined depending on, for example, the application of the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention and the circumstance under which the sheet glass laminate structure is used.


Each sheet glass to be used in the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention preferably has undulations on its surface shape to an extent equal to or larger than a sheet glass produced so as to be mounted on, for example, a liquid crystal display apparatus does. A surface quality standard “waviness” for a sheet glass for liquid crystal is an indicator specifying the surface shape of the sheet glass; for example, the amplitude of a surface undulation is requested to be 0.1 μm or less in at least one arbitrary section having a length of 20 mm. However, the surface quality of the sheet glass for liquid crystal may exceed a waviness standard limit requested of the sheet glass owing to a fluctuation in a certain factor for the production conditions in the step of producing the sheet glass. A sheet glass having such a surface shape that the amplitude of an undulation is, for example, 0.4 μm or 2 μm which exceeds the waviness standard is regarded as a defective item, and is pulverized so as to be recycled as a glass raw material. Even sheet glasses each having such surface quality, if used in the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention, can be expected to improve such strength characteristics of the sheet glass laminate structure as described above because the change of an interval between the sheet glasses repeatedly appears.


Alternatively, the maximum variation ΔHmax of the above interval H may be caused to satisfy the relationship of 0 μm<ΔHmax<200 μm by the following procedure: the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention is sandwiched between two high-rigidity caul plate materials each having an abutting plane subjected to a surface finish treatment so that its “waviness” described above may be 200 μm at maximum, and the surface waviness of each caul plate material is transferred by heat onto the sheet glass laminate structure abutting the caul plate material.


In addition, the dimensions of each sheet glass of which the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention is constituted are not particularly limited as long as the thickness dimension of the sheet glass is less than 1 mm. For example, any one of the various thickness dimensions can be adopted: 0.9 mm, 0.85 mm, 0.8 mm, 0.77 mm, 0.76 mm, 0.75 mm, 0.73 mm, 0.71 mm, 0.7 mm, 0.68 mm, 0.65 mm, 0.63 mm, 0.61 mm, 0.6 mm, 0.5 mm, 0.3 mm, 0.2 mm, and 0.1 mm. On the other hand, the case where the thickness dimension of each sheet glass of which the sheet glass laminate structure is constituted is 1 mm or more is not preferable because of the following reason: although the rigidity of the sheet glass alone increases, the flexibility of the sheet glass reduces, and the brittleness of the sheet glass strongly appears, so it becomes difficult to provide freely the change of the interval H between laminated sheet glasses required for the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention to express excellent strength characteristics. In particular, a sheet glass having a thickness dimension of 2 mm or more used in a conventional nonshattering glass cannot be used in the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention because the rigidity of the sheet glass alone is excessively high. In addition, the shape of an end face or corner of the sheet glass is not particularly limited either. For example, a processed shape such as a C face or an R face may be appropriately adopted as the shape of the end face of the sheet glass. In addition, a shape such as a C face or an R face can be adopted as the shape of the corner of the sheet glass.


With regard to the size of the translucent surface of each sheet glass, any one of the arbitrary dimensions including the following dimensions can be adopted as required as, for example, the longitudinal and horizontal dimensions of a sheet glass having a rectangular shape: 300×400 mm, 360×465 mm, 370×470 mm, 400×500 mm, 550×650 mm, 600×720 mm, 650×830 mm, 680×880 mm, 730×920 mm, 1,000×1,200 mm, 1,100×1,250 mm, 1,370×1,670 mm, and 1,500×1,800 mm. A sheet glass with longitudinal and horizontal directions having another ratio can also be used in the sheet glass laminate structure as long as processing conditions are available. Although an example in which the shape of each sheet glass of which the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention is constituted is a rectangular shape has been described, the shape of the sheet glass is not limited to a rectangular shape, and may be an arbitrary shape.


A material for each sheet glass of which the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention is constituted may be arbitrary as long as the sheet glass is a multi-component oxide glass having a desired hardness and a desired density. For example, a no-alkali glass, a borosilicate glass, or an aluminosilicate glass is a particularly suitable material applicable to the present invention; out of these glasses, the no-alkali glass is most preferable.


When, for example, a no-alkali glass is selected as a sheet glass applied to the present invention, the following material is a more preferable one: the glass composition of the material represented as a mass percentage in terms of an oxide is “50% to 85% of SiO2, 2% to 30% of Al2O3, and 0.1 mass % or less of R2O (R═Na+K+Li)”. In addition, the content of Fe2O3 as an iron component which each sheet glass applied to the present invention contains is preferably 0.2% or less, or more preferably 0.1% or less in order that the sheet glass may be provided with a cyan color or a brown color; the content is preferably 0.05% or less when the sheet glass must be colorless and transparent. In the present invention, the coloring of a material for each sheet glass of which the sheet glass laminate structure is constituted must be managed because the color of each of the sheet glasses is emphasized by a constitution in which the sheet glasses are laminated.


In addition, sheet glasses molded by various molding methods can be adopted as the sheet glasses of which the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention is constituted. For example, a roll-out method, a redraw method, a downdraw method, or a float method can be employed as required.


In addition, any one of the various processing methods may be adopted as a method of processing each sheet glass of which the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention is constituted so that the sheet glass may have desired dimensions. For example, cutting with a diamond wheel, water jet cutting, machining, cutting with a wire saw cutting apparatus, processing with a band saw cutting apparatus, a laser cutting apparatus, a bending-cracking processing machine, a grinding apparatus, or a machining apparatus can be separately used as required.


In addition, the number of sheet glasses to be laminated in the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention is more preferably 30 or less, or still more preferably 15 or less from an economic viewpoint.


In addition, in the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention, any one of the various processing methods as well as the above-mentioned methods can be selected and adopted for processing only an end face of each sheet glass so that the end face may have a desired surface roughness. In addition, the end face alone can be treated with a desired chemical, and may be tempered by an air cooling method or ion exchange method by, for example, being subjected to hot processing.


Any one of organic resins is filled in the intermediate layer. For example, there may be used, as required, a material such as polyvinyl butyral (PVB), a urethane resin, polymethyl methacryalte (PMMA), polystyrene (PS), a methacrylic resin (PMA), polycarbonate (PC), polyvinyl formal (PVF), polyacetal (POM), polypropylene (PP), polyethylene (PE), an AS resin (AS), a ethylene-vinyl acetate copolymer (EVA), polyamide (PA), polyethylene terephthalate (PET), polybutylene terephthalate (PBT), a diallyl phthalate resin (DAP), an AAS resin (AAS), an ACS resin (ACS), polymethyl pentene (TPX), polyphenylene oxide (PPO), polyphenylene sulfide (PPS), a butadiene styrene resin (BS), polyaminobismaleimide (PABM), an MBS resin (MBS), polyimide (PAI), polyarylate (PAR), polyallylsulfone (PASF), polybutadiene (BR), polyether sulfone (PESF), polyether ether ketone (PEEK), a silicon resin (SI), polytetrafluorinated ethylene (PTFE), polyfluorinated ethylene propylene (FEP), perfluoroalkoxy fluorinated plastic (PFA), and a heat-resistant fluorine-based resin. Those intermediate layers may be a single layer or multilayer structure. In addition, a plurality of intermediate layers may be formed of different materials.


In addition, additional performance can be imparted to each intermediate layer involved in the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention by blending the intermediate layer with an appropriate amount of any one of the various additives and drugs such as: a colorant; an absorber for a light beam having a specific wavelength such as an infrared ray or an ultraviolet ray; an antioxidant; a plasticizer; a defoaming agent; a thickener; a painting performance improver; and an antistatic agent. In addition, an oxide film made of, for example, tin oxide or indium oxide, a metal film made of, for example, gold, silver, copper, palladium, platinum, titanium, indium, or aluminum, an organic resin film, or the like can be appropriately selected and used as the intermediate layer.


A product obtained by the following procedure can also be used as a material applied to each intermediate layer involved in the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention: a gel-like polymer previously brought into a partially crosslinked state is prepared, and is molded so as to serve as the intermediate layer. In this case, the shape of the partially crosslinked gel-like polymer may be arbitrary, and can be any one of the various shapes such as a powdery shape, a pellet shape, a ball shape, and a sheet shape. Of those, the sheet shape is particularly preferable because of the following reasons: the surface of the sheet can be subjected to a treatment such as the application of a desired surface treatment agent or functional film to the surface or the coating of the surface with the surface treatment agent or functional film, and fine air bubbles at the time of the molding can be easily removed.


A method of confirming that the maximum variation ΔHmax of the above interval H falls within the range of 0 to 200 μm in the present invention is as follows: a portion including a region where the maximum variation ΔHmax of the above interval H is managed is subjected to non-destructive tomography by an industrial CT scan, and the above interval H on a tomographic line is measured with the tomogram. The CT scan tomography enables high-resolution photography, and allows one to evaluate a change of the order of several tens of micrometers, so the CT scan tomography is preferable in identifying the structure of the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention. In addition, the maximum variation ΔHmax of the above interval H in a region to be managed can be continuously measured by scanning a sheet glass with a laser multilayer film measuring sensor for detecting the position of a glass interface by measuring the intensity of reflected laser light. When the region where the maximum variation ΔHmax of the above interval H is managed becomes long, or one wishes to improve the efficiency of the measurement, the following methods are recommended for the management because of their simplicity: a method involving cutting the sheet glass laminate structure along a straight-line region where the maximum variation ΔHmax of the above interval H is managed with a water jet cutting apparatus or the like and observing the section across the thickness of the structure with a CCD microscope at a magnification of 10 or more to measure the change of the above interval H; and a transmitted light intensity measurement method involving causing light from a laser light source or xenon light source to transmit through the sheet glass laminate structure at an angle of incidence of about 10° to 80° and measuring the change of the above interval H from a change in intensity of the transmitted light. In the transmitted light intensity measurement method, a maximum variation ΔH′max obtained by summing the variations of all the above intervals H of the sheet glass laminate structure present in the path of the transmitted light is measured, and the maximum variation ΔHmax can be calculated from ΔH′max/n where n represents the number of sheet glasses of which the sheet glass laminate structure is constituted. Further, the management can be performed by, for example, a method involving evaluating the change of the above interval H on the basis of the deformation of a certain geometrical pattern such as a lattice pattern observed through the sheet glass laminate structure. When a short-period fluctuation component is included in the measurement of the above interval H of the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention by any such measurement method described above, a high-frequency component corresponding to a surface roughness is removed from the above interval H thus measured, and a waviness component as a long-period component is evaluated for the maximum variation ΔHmax of the above interval H. In order that the waviness component may be obtained, a filter waviness curve W having a cutoff value of, for example, 0.08 mm is preferably used for filtering the high-frequency component.


In addition, when the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention has a Young's modulus (also referred to as “modulus of longitudinal elasticity”, “Young's elastic modulus”, or “Young's coefficient”) of 30 GPa or more in addition to the above-mentioned characteristics, the sheet glass laminate structure has so high rigidity as to be a structure suitable for a window material for a building material or the like.


The case where the Young's modulus of the sheet glass laminate structure is less than 30 GPa is not preferable because of the following reason: when the structure is used as a window material having a large area for a building material or the like, the central portion of the structure is apt to deform readily, and, if the amount of deformation becomes excessively large, each sheet glass and the intermediate layer are apt to peel from each other.


In the case where the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention has a Young's modulus of 30 GPa or more, the sheet glass laminate structure has various sufficiently high mechanical characteristics even when used as a member for a large structure. As a result, the degree of freedom in the design of a building can be increased.


The Young' s modulus of the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention can be measured by the following method: the amount of deformation of the laminate structure when a load is applied to the center of the laminate structure with a bending testing machine is detected with an operating transformer or the like. Alternatively, the Young's modulus may be measured by a measurement method such as a transverse vibration method or a pulse-echo overlap method as well as the above method.


Any one of the various methods can be employed as a method of forming the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention. For example, the following method is permitted: a resin to serve as an intermediate layer is injected into a gap between sheet glasses previously held in a laminated state so that a laminate may be obtained, and then the resin is cured so that a laminate structure may be obtained. Alternatively, the following method is permitted: sheet glasses are superimposed in a state where a sheet material made of a resin is inserted between the sheet glasses, and the resultant is subjected as it is to a heat treatment or a compression treatment. Alternatively, a method involving repeating the following operation is permitted: a resin material serving as an intermediate layer having a predetermined thickness is applied onto one translucent surface of a sheet glass, a sheet glass is further superimposed on the resin material, and a resin material is applied onto the sheet glass. Alternatively, a method as a combination of two or more of such various methods as described above is permitted. That is, a method including the following steps can be adopted as a method of producing the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention: the step involving laminating at least three sheet glasses each having a thickness of less than 1 mm through an intermediate layer between two adjacent sheet glasses and bonding the sheet glasses through the adhesive layers to form a laminate and the step of cooling the laminate to cure the intermediate layers.


In addition, the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention can be formed most easily by the application of a sheet glass obtained by previously bringing a sheet glass to be laminated into a state of being provided with a predetermined surface waviness or periodically coated with a transparent coating film or the like. The sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention can be formed by using a sheet glass obtained by processing or coating a glass surface by various surface formation means so that the surface may have an optimum surface waviness, an optimum coating film, or the like. Here, the various surface formation means include methods such as the polishing and machining of the glass surface in addition to the above-mentioned method. Although the methods such as polishing and machining can realize a desired wavy state, the following method that is the most simple one is preferably adopted: the surface wavy state of each sheet glass is adjusted by precisely adjusting molding conditions such as a molding rate upon molding of the sheet glass out of a raw material in a molten state and a cooling condition. In addition, any one of the various known methods has only to be employed as a method of coating the sheet glass.


In addition, the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention preferably has the following characteristic in addition to the above-mentioned characteristics: a second sheet glass having a thickness dimension equal to or less than 95% of the average thickness dimension of the laminated sheet glasses is provided for the sheet glass as at least one outermost layer through a joining film, and the joining film has a thickness dimension equal to or larger than the average thickness dimension of the intermediate layers. In this case, even when an impact stress is applied to the sheet glass laminate structure, the force applied to the internal structure of the sheet glass laminate structure is alleviated by the second sheet glass serving as the outermost layer of the sheet glass laminate structure, and hence the sheet glass laminate structure is constituted to have improved durability.


A material for the second sheet glass may be identical to or different from the material for each sheet glass of which the laminate structure is constituted. In addition, the second sheet glass may be a crystallized glass, a chemically strengthened glass, or a physically strengthened glass as required. In particular, the rigidity and strength of the sheet glass laminate structure can be efficiently improved by placing a crystallized sheet glass or strengthened sheet glass having high rigidity and a high strength as the second sheet glass on the outermost layer of the sheet glass laminate structure. Further, the second sheet glass may be a patterned sheet glass or a decorated sheet glass provided with a specific color.


In addition, the second sheet glass may be coated with a coating film having specific optical performance, a coating film having electrical performance, a protective reinforcing film, or a tacky film, and may adopt an optimum constitution depending on an application where the second sheet glass is used.


Further, with regard to the surface properties of the second sheet glass, the surface roughness of the translucent surface of the second sheet glass can be appropriately adjusted by, for example, sand blasting, laser processing, a polishing treatment, or an etching treatment with hydrofluoric acid. In addition, the shape of a peripheral end face of the second sheet glass may be different from or identical to that of each sheet glass, and any one of the various known processing methods can be adopted as a method of processing the peripheral end face.


Further, any film can be used as the joining film interposed between the second sheet glass and the sheet glass as long as the film can: bond and join the second sheet glass and the sheet glass; and realize a desired strength after the joining. An organic joining film, an inorganic joining film, or an organic-inorganic composite material-based joining film can be used. Further, such organic joining film may be a single-composition joining film composed of a material that can be utilized as an intermediate film, or may be a multilayer joining film constituted of multiple materials that can be utilized as intermediate films for imparting functionality to the sheet glass laminate structure. For example, the penetration resistance of the sheet glass laminate structure can be improved by using a joining film of such a three-layer constitution that a polycarbonate sheet having a thickness of 1 mm to 3 mm is sandwiched between EVA thin films each having a thickness of 0.2 mm. Further, the joining film may be constituted of a mixture of various additives.


In addition, the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention preferably has the following characteristic in addition to the above-mentioned characteristics: the intermediate layers are each constituted of a sheet material using a thermoplastic resin. In this case, the laminate structure can be formed by an efficient step upon constitution of a laminated structure, and the molding quality of the laminate structure can be easily managed.


For example, each intermediate layer can be obtained by: molding a thermoplastic resin material such as polyvinyl butyral (PVB) or ethylene polyvinyl acetate (EVA) into a film shape in advance; holding the film in a state of being sandwiched between a sheet glass and another sheet glass; and subjecting the resultant in the state to heating or the like to join the film to each sheet glass.


For example, the above sheet material can be provided with irregularities at its proper sites in advance, or a sheet material to which a proper filler or the like has been added may be prepared in advance as the above sheet material. The irregularities may be ordered irregularities, or may be disordered irregularities. In addition, the filler can be adjusted so as to be mixed into the sheet material at the time of the molding of the sheet in advance, or can be embedded in a proper site of the sheet material after the production of the sheet material.


In addition, when, for example, polyvinyl butyral is used for constituting each intermediate layer according to the present invention, polyvinyl butyral preferably has a mass-average molecular weight of 10,000 to 350,000. Setting the mass-average molecular weight within such range can realize a preferable strength. Further, the heat resistance of the sheet glass laminate structure can be significantly improved by using an intermediate layer composed of a fluorine resin such as polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), polyfluoroethylene propylene (FEP), or perfluoroalkoxy fluoroplastic (PFA) and having improved surface-joining performance with a glass as each intermediate layer according to the present invention.


In addition, when the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention has, in addition to the above-mentioned characteristics, such a characteristic that the sheet glass laminate structure is obtained by incorporating a pellet, fibrous substance, network substance, braided fabric, or woven fabric constituted of one or more kinds selected from the group consisting of a glass, a crystallized glass, a metal, and carbon into each intermediate layer, the sheet glass laminate structure can have sufficient rigidity and a sufficient strength, and can correspond to a variety of needs by adopting an optimum constitution depending on applications.


A material for each of the glass, the crystallized glass, the metal, and carbon described above is not particularly limited. For example, any one of the various multi-component glasses, quartz glasses, and the like can be used as the glass, and any one of the various crystallized glass materials can be utilized as the crystallized glass; the same holds true for the metal and carbon. Further, the size, shape, and the like of the pellet, fibrous substance, network substance, braided fabric, or woven fabric are not limited.


For example, when each intermediate layer contains glass fibers, the rigidity of the intermediate layer is improved, and hence the rigidity of the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention can be significantly improved. Overall dimensions such as the diameter and length of each glass fiber incorporated into the intermediate layer are not particularly limited as long as the sheet glass laminate structure can be provided with desired dimensions. In addition, the composition of each glass fiber is not particularly limited either. For example, a material such as a silica glass, an E glass, a D glass, an H glass, an AR glass, or an S glass can be appropriately selected. In addition, when each intermediate layer contains special glass fibers each having a refractive index matching that of the resin material of the intermediate layer, the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention can maintain such clear transmittance that no light scattering occurs when light transmits through the sheet glass laminate structure.


In addition, an appropriate amount of a coating agent capable of imparting desired performance can be applied to the surface of each glass fiber in each intermediate layer. For example, one or more kinds of coating agents such as a sizing agent, a binder, a coupling agent, a lubricant, an antistatic agent, an emulsifier, an emulsion stabilizer, a pH adjustor, a defoaming agent, a colorant, an antioxidant, an antifungal agent, and a stabilizer can be arbitrarily applied in an appropriate amount to the surface of each glass fiber. In addition, any such surface treatment agent or applying agent may be either a starch-based one or a plastic-based one.


In addition, when the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention has, in addition to the above-mentioned characteristics, such a characteristic that the glass fibers each have a length dimension of 5 mm or less, the glass fibers can be uniformly dispersed with ease without being entangled, so problems resulting from a state where the glass fibers are unevenly dispersed such as a variation in strength of each intermediate layer and an unbalanced thickness dimension of the intermediate layer hardly occur.


In addition, the glass surface of the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention can be inscribed with a material code, model number, or the like by using, for example, laser, etching, or sand blasting at a proper site of the sheet glass laminate structure as required.


Further, the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention preferably has a transmittance of 30% or more in addition to the above-mentioned characteristics because the sheet glass laminate structure can be used as a lighting window for a building as well.


The phrase “has a transmittance of 30% or more” as used herein refers to a state where an average transmittance for visible light beams each having a wavelength in the range of 400 nm to 800 nm in terms of a linear transmittance including the surface reflection of the sheet glass laminate structure is 30% or more. The transmittance including the surface reflection of the sheet glass laminate structure has only to be measured with, for example, a known double-beam scan type spectral transmittance measuring apparatus in a state where the sheet glass laminate structure having predetermined dimensions and a predetermined area is placed on the measurement light side of the apparatus. In this case, when the surface of the sheet glass laminate structure is provided with a certain film material, attention must be paid so that the measurement may be performed for the sheet glass laminate structure including the film material.


In addition, when the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention is used as a window material for a building or the like in such a manner that an object distant from, and on the opposite side of, the sheet glass laminate structure is visually observed through the sheet glass laminate structure, the sheet glass laminate structure preferably has as high a transmittance as possible; the transmittance is preferably 40% or more, or more preferably 50% or more.


Further, the surface of the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention can be provided with a coating film by any one of the various methods. A refractive index-adjusting film for imparting optical performance, an impermeable film, an antireflection film, a protective film for improving weatherability, a conductive film, a charging film, or the like can be appropriately adopted as the coating film. In addition, a chemical vapor deposition method, a physical vapor deposition method, a spray method, a dipping method, a sticking method, a brush coating method, or the like can be appropriately employed as a method of providing the sheet glass laminate structure with the coating film.


In addition, the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention may be turned into an entirely curved structure by pressing the sheet glasses into a mold material molded in advance upon formation of the laminate structure.


In addition, an intermediate layer between sheet glasses in the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention can be provided with a transparent conductor or metal wiring as wiring for detection with a view to improving additionally the crime-preventing performance of the sheet glass laminate structure. In the case where such structure is adopted, when the sheet glass laminate structure is used as a window material or door material for a building, an action for destroying the sheet glass laminate structure such as rupture or penetration can be electrically detected with ease. In addition, a terminal of a specific sensor except those described above such as a vibration sensor or a temperature sensor can be sandwiched between the sheet glasses.


In addition, a multiple sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention is characterized in that the multiple sheet glass laminate structure is of a multiple structure obtained by interposing a gap-filling film having a thickness dimension of 0.3 mm or more between sheet glass laminate structures of the above kind.


The case where the gap-filling film has a thickness dimension of less than 0.3 mm is not preferable because it may be impossible to join sufficiently strongly sheet glass laminate structures each having a large area.


Alternatively, the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention may be constituted by recycling a sheet glass material to be mounted on a liquid crystal display apparatus.


To be specific, the following procedure may be adopted: after a liquid crystal display apparatus has been assembled once by using a no-alkali sheet glass material to be mounted on a liquid crystal display apparatus such as a product with a glass material code OA-10 or OA-21 available from Nippon Electric Glass Co., Ltd., a structure recovered from the liquid crystal display apparatus that has become unusable owing to, for example, the breakdown of the apparatus is adopted as the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention. A no-alkali sheet glass material used in a liquid crystal display apparatus is particularly desirably recycled as a sheet glass to be utilized in the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention because a thin-film transistor circuit formed on the surface of the material serves as a structure to change the sheet glass interval H regularly. Alternatively, a no-alkali glass of a thin-sheet shape obtained by remelting a discarded material and molding the molten product into predetermined dimensions may be used.


EFFECTS OF THE INVENTION

As described above, the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention is a sheet glass laminate structure obtained by laminating at least three sheet glasses each having a thickness of less than 1 mm through an intermediate layer between two adjacent sheet glasses, in which, when a central portion having a length of 20 mm and including the middle point of a virtual line which has a length equal to 50% of the maximum overall dimension of the translucent surface of each of the sheet glasses, which is parallel to the direction of the maximum overall dimension, and which adopts the center of the translucent surface as its middle point, and opposite end portions having lengths of 20 mm each from the opposite ends of the virtual line are set on the virtual line, a maximum variation ΔHmax of an interval H between the two adjacent sheet glasses opposed to each other through the intermediate layer at each of the central portion and the opposite end portions satisfies the relationship of 0 μm<ΔHmax<200 μm. Accordingly, the sheet glass laminate structure is suitable as a window material having a structure excellent in various properties such as shock resistance, crime prevention nature, and heat shock resistance, and capable of realizing various strength properties requested of a building or the like as well as low injuring performance to a substance or person to collide with the sheet glass laminate structure by virtue of flexibility at the time of small deformation of the sheet glass laminate structure.


Further, the shock resistance of the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention can be improved, and the sheet glass laminate structure is provided with additionally high robustness when a second sheet glass having a thickness dimension equal to or less than 95% of the average thickness dimension of the three or more laminated sheet glasses is provided for the sheet glass as at least one outermost layer through a joining film, and the joining film has a thickness dimension equal to or larger than the average thickness dimension of the intermediate layers. As a result, the sheet glass laminate structure can find use in an additionally wide variety of applications.


In addition, the case where the intermediate layers of the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention are each constituted of a sheet material composed of a thermoplastic resin and having a proper thickness is suitable because of the following reasons: the material characteristics of the sheet glass laminate structure such as an elastic modulus, toughness, penetration resistance, a transmittance, and heat resistance can be easily adjusted to desired values by arbitrarily selecting the thickness of each intermediate layer and the number of laminated sheet glasses, and a sheet glass laminate structure having stable quality can be efficiently produced.


In addition, when a pellet, fibrous substance, network substance, braided fabric, or woven fabric constituted of one or more kinds selected from the group consisting of a glass, a crystallized glass, a metal, and carbon is incorporated into each of the intermediate layers of the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention, the rigidity and shock resistance of the sheet glass laminate structure are additionally improved, and hence the sheet glass laminate structure can realize sufficient strength characteristics even in the case where the sheet glass laminate structure has a large area.


Further, the multiple sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention is of a multiple structure obtained by interposing a gap-filling film having a thickness dimension of 0.3 mm or more between such sheet glass laminate structures as described above. Accordingly, even when one sheet glass laminate structure is insufficient in terms of strength, an improved strength enough to resist various shocks can be achieved by laminating multiple sheet glass laminate structures.


BEST MODE FOR CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION

Hereinafter, details about an embodiment of a sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention will be specifically described by way of examples.


Example 1


FIGS. 1 and 2 show explanatory and perspective views of a sheet glass laminate structure 10 of the present invention. FIG. 1(A) is a perspective view showing the entirety of the sheet glass laminate structure, FIG. 1(B) is a partial sectional view of the sheet glass laminate structure, and FIG. 1(C) is an enlarged sectional view of the main portion of FIG. 1(B). In those figures, reference numeral 20 represents each sheet glass of which the sheet glass laminate structure is constituted, reference numeral 20a represents a translucent surface, and reference numeral 30 represents an intermediate layer interposed between the two adjacent sheet glasses.


As can be seen from FIGS. 1(A) and 1(B), the sheet glass laminate structure 10 is constituted by laminating the three sheet glasses 20 each having a thickness dimension of 0.7 mm while aligning the edges of the sheet glasses. Each of the sheet glasses 20 has a translucent surface measuring 300 mm long by 500 mm wide. The composition of each of the three sheet glasses 20 represented as a mass percentage in terms of an oxide is “60 mass % of SiO2, 16 mass % of Al2O3, 10 mass % of B2O3, 14 mass % of MO (M=Ca, Mg, Ba, Sr, or Zn), and 0.01 mass % of Fe2O3.” A sheet glass used in a liquid crystal display apparatus and having no-alkali composition is recovered and recycled as each sheet glass 20.


In addition, the intermediate layers 30 among the three sheet glasses 20 are each a layer of polyvinyl butyral (PVB) having a thickness of 0.2 mm mixed with 0.5 mass % of glass fibers each having E glass composition and a length of 0.1 mm. The glass fibers, which are fiber materials having fine dimensions, are molded out of existing glass fibers by pulverization with an appropriate pulverizer such as a ball mill.


The sheet glass laminate structure 10 is prototyped so as to find applications in window materials for buildings. The structure 10 has a thickness dimension of 3 mm or less, and the end face side of the sheet glass laminate structure 10 is constituted so as to be capable of being fixed with a frame as required. In addition, the translucent surface 20a as the outermost surface of each sheet glass 20 is provided with a heat reflecting film (not shown), which reflects sunlight from the outdoors so that a specific feeling of glare when one shows in visually observing the translucent surface can be suppressed.



FIG. 2 is an explanatory view for explaining a fluctuation in dimension between the two adjacent sheet glasses 20 opposed to each other through the intermediate layer 30 in the sheet glass laminate structure 10. The maximum overall dimension of the translucent surface of the sheet glass laminate structure 10 is 500 mm, and is defined as 100. A straight line having a length corresponding to 50, i.e., 250 mm is placed at the central portion of the transparent surface so that its middle point may coincide with the center of the translucent surface and the straight line may be parallel to the longer side of the translucent surface; the straight line is defined as a straight-line region 40. As partially shown in FIG. 1(C) in an enlarged fashion, a difference ΔHmax between the minimum Hmin and maximum Hmax of an interval H between the sheet glasses is measured for a 20-mm straight-line segment at each of a central portion 41, and opposite end portions 42 and 43 of the straight-line region 40. As a result, measured values for the maximum ΔHmax of a fluctuation in dimension of the interval H between the sheet glasses 20 at the portions 41, 42, and 43 were 24 μm, 63 μm, and 39 μm, respectively. The measured values ranged from 24 μm to 63 μm, and were each equal to or less than 200 μm, so it was able to be confirmed by a cutting observation method that the condition for the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention was satisfied. In addition, measurement similar to that described above is performed for other multiple sites of a rectangular central region measuring 200 mm long by 300 mm wide which has an area accounting for 40% of the area of the substantially rectangular translucent surface of the sheet glass laminate structure 10 and which includes the geometrical center of gravity of the translucent surface. In this case as well, the ΔHmax ranges from 24 μm to 63 μm, so the presence of the change of the above interval H can be confirmed for the region as well. In order that such change of the sheet glass interval H might be obtained, an aluminum sheet material of 3 mm in thickness having the same dimensions as those of each sheet glass was provided with a surface having a maximum waviness of 100 μm by surface finish, and the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention was sandwiched between two aluminum sheet materials subjected to the surface finish as caul plates so that the surface waviness might be transferred onto the sheet glass laminate structure. Any one of the various methods except the foregoing is also available; for example, the sheet glass interval H can be caused to change by appropriately adjusting the distribution, amount, or the like of a filler material to be added to each intermediate layer 30 or by using a sheet material provided with fine irregularities in advance as each intermediate layer 30.


Next, a method of producing the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention will be described below in order.


First, no-alkali glass sheet materials each having the following composition represented as a mass percentage in terms of an oxide are prepared so that predetermined dimensions may be achieved in advance: 50% to 85% of SiO2, 2% to 30% of Al2O3, and 0.1 mass % or less of R2O (R═Na+K+Li). Here, recycled products of sheet glasses assembled once into a liquid crystal display apparatus are used, and are each brought into a sufficiently cleaned state through a washing step so that a stain, a deposit, or the like may not be present on the surface of the sheet glass. In order that a thin-film structure on the surface of each of those sheet glasses may serve to change regularly the sheet glass interval H, various transparent thin-film circuits and optical thin-film layers constituted on the sheet glasses are not removed. In addition, when a glass is produced so as to be adopted for the sheet glass laminate structure application, in the case where a sheet glass is molded from a glass melting furnace, a sheet glass having dimensions held to close tolerances can be obtained by: mixing predetermined raw materials; melting the mixture; homogenizing the molten product to provide a glass sheet; and molding the sheet by a molding method such as an overflow downdraw method.


Next, 20 g of a polyvinyl butyral (PVB) resin powder are dissolved in 100 ml of a mixed organic solvent composed of ethanol, toluene, and butanol at a ratio of 12:8:1. An amount equivalent to 0.5 mass % of glass fibers each having E glass composition and a length of 0.1 mm prepared in advance by pulverization with a ball mill is weighed and mixed into the solution, and the solution and the glass fibers are homogeneously mixed with a homogenizer so that a PVB solution may be prepared. Air bubbles involved at the time of the mixing are deaerated so that a homogeneous PVB solution containing no bubbles may be obtained.


A predetermined amount of the PVB solution is dropped onto a surface having a transparent, thin-film transistor circuit of a sheet glass held horizontally, and the PVB solution is repeatedly applied with a coater so as to have a uniform thickness. Then, the organic solvent is dried so that a PVB resin film having an average thickness of 200 μm may be formed. The thickness of the PVB resin film that can be formed by the method ranges from several tens of micrometers to several hundreds of micrometers, and the thickness of the resin film can be adjusted relatively freely. In addition, an external appearance failure such as foaming in a subsequent step can be alleviated by reducing the amount of the organic solvent remaining in the PVB resin film to the extent possible.


Two sheet glasses each having the PVB resin film on one of its surfaces, and one sheet glass having no PVB resin film were laminated. An aluminum sheet material of 3 mm in thickness having the same shape and the same dimensions as those of each sheet glass was provided with a surface having a maximum waviness of 100 μm by surface finish, and the three sheet glasses were sandwiched between two aluminum sheet materials subjected to the surface finish as caul plates so that the surface states of the materials might be transferred onto the sheet glasses. The sheet glasses in alaminated state and the aluminum caul plates were hermetically stored in a vacuum bag. Air remaining in a gap between a sheet glass and the PVB resin film was subjected to vacuum deaeration, and the resultant was subjected to hot pressing at a pressure of 10 kgf/cm2 for about 20 minutes while being heated to about 100° C. so that the PVB resin film and the sheet glass might fuse with each other. Thus, the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention was obtained.


Next, the evaluation of the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention for mechanical performance will be described.


Example 2

In order that the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention may be evaluated for its load-deformation characteristic by a three-point bending test, a liquid crystal sheet glass waviness non-standard product having a translucent surface measuring 50 mm long by 180 mm wide, and a thickness of 0.7 mm is prepared. In order that four, five, or six sheet glasses of this type may be laminated, an ethyl polyvinyl acetate (EVA) resin sheet having a thickness dimension of 0.25 mm, and polyvinyl butyral (PVB) resin sheets having thickness dimensions of 0.38 mm and 0.76 mm are each shaped so as to have the same dimensions as those of each sheet glass. Then, each of the resin sheets is sandwiched between sheet glasses to be laminated so that a laminate structure of the sheet glasses and the resin sheets may be obtained. Then, the laminate structure of the sheet glasses and the resin sheets is sandwiched between the abutting surfaces of aluminum caul plates each subjected to a surface treatment to have a maximum waviness of 50 μm. The laminate structure is brought into a state of being fixed under reduced pressure in a vacuum bag made of a resin. Next, the laminate structure is subjected to contact bonding under heat at an increased pressure of 10 kgf/cm2 for 20 minutes while being heated. Thus, a test piece is obtained.


The test piece thus obtained was evaluated for its loading resistance by a 120-mm span three-point bending test with a strength testing apparatus manufactured by Shimadzu Corporation under a normal-temperature, normal-humidity environment at a crosshead speed of 0.5 mm/min.



FIG. 3 shows and explains the load-deformation behavior of the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention (having a thickness of 5.16 mm) constituted of six sheet glasses with an EVA resin film having a thickness of 0.25 mm in a three-point bending test as a representative example of the result of the evaluation. In FIG. 3, the axis of abscissa indicates the amount in which the test piece is depressed by a crosshead, that is, the displacement (mm) of the test piece, and the axis of ordinate indicates a load (kgf) applied through the crosshead. The evaluated test piece shows a displacement of 3.5 mm at a load of 62 kgf. At the load, the sheet glass of the sheet glass laminate structure positioned at the back surface of the surface of the sheet glass laminate structure which the crosshead of the testing apparatus abuts is broken, and the load is reduced to some extent. However, the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention is a laminate of multiple sheet glasses, so the load does not immediately return to zero, and the remaining five sheet glasses are found to maintain the strength of the sheet glass laminate structure. As a result, the load reduces to 49 kgf. Further, when the crosshead is inserted downward, the displacement increases to 4.9 mm, and the load recovers to 61 kgf again. Thus, a second sheet glass is ruptured. When the crosshead is further inserted downward continuously, an increase in load and the rupture of a sheet glass subsequent to the increase repeatedly occur. Until the final sheet glass is broken at a displacement of 7.7 mm and the test piece finally loses its strength as a structural material, the sheet glass laminate structure maintains its strength as a structural material in spite of the fact that part of the sheet glasses of which the test piece is constituted crack. Although a conventional nonshattering glass shows high rigidity and extremely slight deformation in its load-deformation behavior, the nonshattering glass shows such catastrophic limiting behavior that the nonshattering glass loses its strength immediately after the rupture of a sheet glass to break. On the other hand, the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention has the following characteristic performance: in a three-point bending test, the sheet glass laminate structure shows a linear elastic behavior until the first sheet glass ruptures, and, thereafter, maintains its material strength as a composite material. The foregoing result shows that the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention has a load-displacement characteristic excellent in ability to absorb external force energy, and has high toughness, that is, a high shock-absorbing ability that cannot be obtained with a conventional sheet glass or nonshattering glass. In addition, as can be seen from a linear relationship until the first sheet glass is broken, the Young's modulus of the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention is as high as 10.9 GPa. In addition, a straight-line region of 90 mm in length including the center of the surface of the sample, i.e., the sheet glass laminate structure used in this test as its middle point and parallel to the direction of the longer side of the surface was evaluated for an interval H between the two adjacent sheet glasses of the sheet glass laminate structure used in this test by a transmitted xenon light intensity measurement method. As a result, it was able to be confirmed that the maximum fluctuation ΔHmax of the dimension of the interval H for a length of 20 mm ranged from 17 μm to 36 μm. It should be noted that, in order that the intensity of xenon light might be converted into the sheet glass interval II, a calibration curve showing a correspondence between the intensity of transmitted light and the change of the sheet glass interval H was created in advance before the sample was evaluated for the sheet glass interval H.


Next, the evaluation of the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention for mechanical performance by a four-point bending test will be described. FIG. 4 shows and explains the load-deformation behavior of the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention (having a thickness of 5.08 mm) constituted of four sheet glasses with a PVB resin film having a thickness of 0.76 mm in a four-point bending test. In FIG. 4, the axis of abscissa indicates the amount in which the test piece is depressed by the crosshead, that is, the displacement (mm) of the test piece, and the axis of ordinate indicates a load (kgf) applied to the test piece through the crosshead. The behavior of FIG. 4 is characterized in that the behavior is the following nonlinear elastic behavior: a required load until the crosshead is inserted downward by 2 mm is at most 2 kgf, which is a small value, but the load abruptly increases as the test piece is depressed by the crosshead in an amount equal to or larger than the displacement. In other words, the sheet glass laminate structure has the following specific nonlinear elasticity: the sheet glass laminate structure has two kinds of elastic deformation characteristics; specifically, while the sheet glass laminate structure shows a Young's modulus of 0.7 GPa, which is a relatively small value, for an initial displacement, the sheet glass laminate structure shows a Young's modulus of 8.9 GPa, which is ten or more times as large as that described above, for a displacement equal to or larger than a certain value. That is, when a force is applied to the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention, the sheet glass laminate structure flexibly deforms to absorb energy as long as the displacement falls within a certain range; when the displacement increases, the sheet glass laminate structure can receive a large force by virtue of the second elasticity. The application of the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention as a novel sheet glass material having the following characteristic can be expected from the utilization of the foregoing characteristic: for example, when the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention and a person collide with each other, the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention flexibly deforms at an initial stage to receive the person's body at a low shock, and then serves as a highly elastic body by virtue of the expression of the second property to absorb additionally large energy, thereby protecting the person's body. The flexible elastic behavior at the initial stage of the deformation probably originates from the following characteristic: the sheet glass interval H is caused to change by local deflection or irregularities of the sheet glass laminate structure. It was found that, although the high toughness shown in the above-mentioned three-point bending behavior and the nonlinear elasticity found in the four-point bending behavior were observed to change depending on the number of laminated sheet glasses and the thickness of each intermediate layer, these properties were coexistent in the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention. A straight-line region of 90 mm in length including the center of the surface of the sample, i.e., the sheet glass laminate structure used in this test as its middle point and parallel to the direction of the longer side of the surface was evaluated for an interval H between the two adjacent sheet glasses of the sheet glass laminate structure used in this test with a laser multilayer film measuring sensor. As a result, the maximum variation ΔHmax of the dimension of the interval H for a length of 20 mm ranged from 23 μm to 45 μm.


Further, FIG. 5 collectively shows a change in Young's modulus obtained by performing a three-point bending test when the number of laminated sheet glasses, and the thickness and kind of each intermediate layer are changed. Here, the axis of abscissa indicates the number of laminated sheet glasses, and the axis of ordinate indicates a Young's modulus obtained by the three-point bending test. As can be seen from the figure, when the number of laminated sheet glasses is increased for each kind of an intermediate layer, the Young's modulus of the sheet glass laminate structure reduces owing to a reduction in volume ratio of the glass to the intermediate layer resin. On the other hand, when the number of laminated sheet glasses is fixed, a volume ratio of the glass to the intermediate layer resin increases as the thickness of each intermediate layer reduces, so the Young's modulus of the sheet glass laminate structure increases. The foregoing results have shown that an arbitrary Young's modulus can be obtained by adjusting the volume ratio (glass/intermediate layer resin) between the glass and the intermediate layer resin of which the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention is constituted. A straight-line region of 90 mm in length including the center of the surface of the sample, i.e., the sheet glass laminate structure used in this test as its middle point and parallel to the direction of the longer side of the surface was evaluated for an interval H between the two adjacent sheet glasses of the sheet glass laminate structure used in this test with a laser multilayer film measuring sensor. As a result, it was able to be confirmed that the maximum variation ΔHmax of the dimension of the interval H for a length of 20 mm ranged from 18 μm to 31 μm.


The foregoing result has revealed that the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention can be provided with such high rigidity that the sheet glass laminate structure can be used as a structural material, or with extremely flexible elastic nature, by properly designing the constitution of materials to be laminated.


In addition, the test has shown the following: when a stress is applied to the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention, each intermediate layer serves to suppress the shear deformation of each sheet glass, so the sheet glass laminate structure can alleviate a stress applied by the lamination of sheet glasses. Accordingly, the three or more laminated sheet glasses are not crushed at once by the application of a stress, but are gradually destroyed. Such performance as well as such deflected structure between laminated sheet glasses provides the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention with a structure excellent in shock resistance.


In addition, as is apparent from the foregoing description, the Young's modulus of the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention can be additionally increased by appropriately changing production conditions for the sheet glass laminate structure. It has been revealed that selecting such conditions that the Young's modulus becomes as large as possible increases the value to 31 GPa, which is an additionally large value.


In addition, a heat shock resistance index R=(Eαθ2)−1 of a sheet glass having a thickness of 0.7 mm in the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention was calculated; E represented the Young's modulus (kgf/mm2) of the sheet glass, θ represented the thickness (mm) of the sheet glass, and α represented the coefficient of thermal expansion (1/K) of the sheet glass. As a result, the value for the index was 20 K/kgf or more, so it was able to be confirmed that the sheet glass laminate structure was able to realize high heat resistance.


Further, in order that the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention might be evaluated for its chemical durability, the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention having the same constitution as that of Example 1 produced in advance was cut into ten 80-mm square shapes, and the ten samples were subjected to a boiling test for water resistance in boiling water for 12 hours. After the completion of the test, the state of the surface of the sheet glass laminate structure was evaluated for the presence or absence of abnormality by observation with a stereomicroscope at a magnification of 20 and with the eyes. As a result, it was revealed that the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention did not show any reduction in its transmittance resulting from, for example, the alteration of the structure on its surface, and had such water resistance that the structure could be put into practical use without any problem.


As described above, the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention not only had high shock resistance but also was excellent in heat resistance and water resistance. Accordingly, the structure was found to be suitable as a window material for various buildings.


Example 3

Next, another sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention will be described below.



FIG. 6 shows a partial sectional view of another sheet glass laminate structure 11 of the present invention. The sheet glass laminate structure 11 is obtained by laminating sheet glasses 21 each subjected to a strengthening treatment and each made of a borosilicate glass, and intermediate layers 31 each interposed between two adjacent sheet glasses. Each of the sheet glasses 21 has a translucent surface measuring 300 mm by 400 mm, has a thickness dimension of 0.6 mm, and is in a state where a surface undulation exceeds 20 μm in a segment having a length of 20 mm. In addition, each of the intermediate layers 31 is constituted of a polyvinyl butyral resin sheet in which a translucent alumina filler is dispersed and mixed, and has a thickness dimension of 0.38 mm.


In addition, another structural characteristic of the sheet glass laminate structure 11 is as follows: a thin sheet glass (second sheet glass) 50 made of a transparent, crystallized glass is joined to one side of the sheet glass laminate structure 11 by a joining film 60 made of polyvinyl butyral. The crystallized glass 50 as a thin sheet glass has a thickness dimension of 0.48 mm, which is 80% of the thickness dimension of each sheet glass 21. In addition, the joining film 60 has a thickness dimension of 0.76 mm.


In the structure 11 as well, the following results are found for a fluctuation in dimension between the two adjacent sheet glasses 21 opposed to each other through the intermediate layer 31: values for the maximum variation ΔHmax of the interval H between the sheet glasses measured with a laser multilayer film measuring sensor at a 20-mm central portion and 20-mm opposite end portions in a straight-line region of 200 mm in length adopting the center of the translucent surface of each sheet glass of the sheet glass laminate structure 11 as its middle point and parallel to the longer side of the surface are 110 μm, 76 μm, and 140 μm, respectively, so the measured values range from 76 μm to 140 μm, and each fall within the range of 0 to 200 μm. Accordingly, the structure has high rigidity.


Example 4


FIG. 7 shows a partial sectional view of another multiple sheet glass laminate structure 12 of the present invention. The multiple sheet glass laminate structure 12 is of a constitution having a repeating structure obtained by joining, with a gap-filling layer 70, the two sheet glass laminate structures 11 each of which: is similar to that shown in Example 2; and is constituted of the sheet glasses 21 and the intermediate layers 31. The gap-filling layer is formed by sandwiching a polycarbonate resin film with an adhesive layer, and has a thickness dimension of 0.64 mm.


In the structure 12 as well, the following results are found for a fluctuation in dimension between the two adjacent sheet glasses 21 opposed to each other through the intermediate layer 31: values for the maximum variation ΔHmax of the interval H between the sheet glasses for a length of 20 mm measured at a central portion and opposite end portions in a straight-line region of 200 mm in length adopting the center of the translucent surface of each sheet glass of each sheet glass laminate structure 11 as its middle point and parallel to the longer side of the surface are 110 μm, 76 μm, and 140 μm, respectively, so the measured values range from 76 μm to 140 μm, and each fall within the range of 0 to 200 μm. Accordingly, the structure has high rigidity.


Further, an example in which a sheet glass having a thickness smaller than that of each sheet glass of which the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention is constituted is evaluated for its structural strength will be described.


Example 5

Two sheet glass laminate structures were prepared: one of them was obtained by laminating four sheet glasses each having a thickness of 0.1 mm with an EVA resin film having a thickness of 0.25 mm, and the other was obtained by laminating six sheet glasses each having a thickness of 0.1 mm. Two sheet glass laminate structures each having one of those laminated structures and two sheet glass laminate structures each having the other laminated structure were subjected to a three-point bending test, and the Young's modulus of a sheet glass laminate structure of each constitution was determined from the load-deformation behaviors of these structures. As a result, it was able to be confirmed that the sheet glass laminate structure obtained by laminating four sheet glasses had a Young's modulus of 17 GPa, and the sheet glass laminate structure obtained by laminating six sheet glasses had a Young's modulus of 7 GPa. It was revealed that those Young's moduli were extremely small values for sheet glass materials, and hence the sheet glass laminate structures each served as a material having excellent flexibility. It can be confirmed that the maximum variation ΔIImax of the interval II between the two adjacent sheet glasses of each of the laminate structures used in this example measured by a transparent body boundary surface position measurement method with a laser microscope falls within the range of 62 to 108 μm. Accordingly, each of the laminate structures is found to be the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention.


As described above, the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention and the multiple sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention obtained by further laminating sheet glass laminate structures of the above kind are each a structure having high rigidity and excellent shock resistance, and are each a structural material having such quality as to be capable of finding use in a wide variety of applications including buildings and electronic parts.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS


FIG. 1 are each an explanatory view of a sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention, FIG. 1(A) being a perspective view showing the entirety of the sheet glass laminate structure, FIG. 1(B) being a partial sectional view of the sheet glass laminate structure, and FIG. 1(C) being an enlarged sectional view of the main portion of the sheet glass laminate structure.



FIG. 2 is an explanatory view of a region where a sheet glass interval H of the present invention is observed to fluctuate by up to 200 μm.



FIG. 3 is a graph showing the results of a three-point bending test on the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention in which six sheet glasses are laminated.



FIG. 4 is a graph showing the results of a four-point bending test on the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention in which four sheet glasses are laminated.



FIG. 5 is a graph showing the Young's modulus of the sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention measured by a three-point bending test.



FIG. 6 is a partial sectional view of another sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention.



FIG. 7 is a partial sectional view of a multiple sheet glass laminate structure of the present invention.





DESCRIPTION OF SYMBOLS


10, 11 sheet glass laminate structure



12 multiple sheet glass laminate structure



20, 21 sheet glass



20
a translucent surface



30, 31 intermediate layer



40 straight-line region parallel to the direction of the maximum overall dimension of a translucent surface



41 central portion of straight-line region 40



42, 43 opposite end portion of the straight-line region 40



50 thin sheet glass (second sheet glass)



60 joining film



70 gap-filling layer


H interval between two adjacent sheet glasses


ΔHmax maximum variation


P center of a surface

Claims
  • 1. A sheet glass laminate structure obtained by laminating at least three sheet glasses each having a thickness of less than 1 mm through an intermediate layer between two adjacent sheet glasses, characterized in that, when a central portion having a length of 20 mm and including a middle point of a virtual line which has a length equal to 50% of a maximum overall dimension of a translucent surface of each of the sheet glasses, which is parallel to a direction of the maximum overall dimension, and which adopts a center of the translucent surface as its middle point, and opposite end portions having lengths of 20 mm each from opposite ends of the virtual line are set on the virtual line, a maximum variation ΔHmax of an interval H between the two adjacent sheet glasses opposed to each other through the intermediate layer at each of the central portion and the opposite end portions satisfies a relationship of 0 μm<ΔHmax<200 μm.
  • 2. A sheet glass laminate structure according to claim 1, characterized in that a second sheet glass having a thickness dimension equal to or less than 95% of an average thickness dimension of the three or more laminated sheet glasses is provided for the sheet glass as at least one outermost layer through a joining film, and the joining film has a thickness dimension equal to or larger than an average thickness dimension of the intermediate layers.
  • 3. A sheet glass laminate structure according to claim 1, characterized in that the intermediate layers are each constituted of a sheet material using a thermoplastic resin.
  • 4. A sheet glass laminate structure according to claim 1, characterized in that a pellet, fibrous substance, network substance, braided fabric, or woven fabric constituted of one or more kinds selected from the group consisting of a glass, a crystallized glass, a metal, and carbon is incorporated into each of the intermediate layers.
  • 5. A multiple sheet glass laminate structure characterized by comprising a multiple structure obtained by interposing a gap-filling film having a thickness dimension of 0.3 mm or more between the sheet glass laminate structures according to claim 1.
  • 6. A sheet glass laminate structure according to claim 2, characterized in that the intermediate layers are each constituted of a sheet material using a thermoplastic resin.
  • 7. A sheet glass laminate structure according to claim 2, characterized in that a pellet, fibrous substance, network substance, braided fabric, or woven fabric constituted of one or more kinds selected from the group consisting of a glass, a crystallized glass, a metal, and carbon is incorporated into each of the intermediate layers.
  • 8. A sheet glass laminate structure according to claim 3, characterized in that a pellet, fibrous substance, network substance, braided fabric, or woven fabric constituted of one or more kinds selected from the group consisting of a glass, a crystallized glass, a metal, and carbon is incorporated into each of the intermediate layers.
  • 9. A sheet glass laminate structure according to claim 6, characterized in that a pellet, fibrous substance, network substance, braided fabric, or woven fabric constituted of one or more kinds selected from the group consisting of a glass, a crystallized glass, a metal, and carbon is incorporated into each of the intermediate layers.
  • 10. A multiple sheet glass laminate structure characterized by comprising a multiple structure obtained by interposing a gap-filling film having a thickness dimension of 0.3 mm or more between the sheet glass laminate structures according to claim 2.
  • 11. A multiple sheet glass laminate structure characterized by comprising a multiple structure obtained by interposing a gap-filling film having a thickness dimension of 0.3 mm or more between the sheet glass laminate structures according to claim 3.
  • 12. A multiple sheet glass laminate structure characterized by comprising a multiple structure obtained by interposing a gap-filling film having a thickness dimension of 0.3 mm or more between the sheet glass laminate structures according to claim 4.
  • 13. A multiple sheet glass laminate structure characterized by comprising a multiple structure obtained by interposing a gap-filling film having a thickness dimension of 0.3 mm or more between the sheet glass laminate structures according to claim 6.
  • 14. A multiple sheet glass laminate structure characterized by comprising a multiple structure obtained by interposing a gap-filling film having a thickness dimension of 0.3 mm or more between the sheet glass laminate structures according to claim 7.
  • 15. A multiple sheet glass laminate structure characterized by comprising a multiple structure obtained by interposing a gap-filling film having a thickness dimension of 0.3 mm or more between the sheet glass laminate structures according to claim 8.
  • 16. A multiple sheet glass laminate structure characterized by comprising a multiple structure obtained by interposing a gap-filling film having a thickness dimension of 0.3 mm or more between the sheet glass laminate structures according to claim 9.
PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind 371c Date
PCT/JP2007/067833 9/13/2007 WO 00 3/13/2009