Claims
- 1. A method of thermally toughening glass comprising:
- heating the glass to a temperature above its strain point;
- chilling the hot glass by contact with a gas-fluidised particulate material which comprises a mixture in predetermined proportions of a number of selected particulate materials, at least one of which has gas-generating properties;
- selecting the gas-generating particulate material from the group consisting of .gamma.-alumina, aluminum trihydrate, aluminum monohydrate, aluminosilicate and sodium bicarbonate; and
- mixing said selected particulate materials in predetermined proportions which are tailored to impart to the mixture a thermal capacity per unit volume at minimum fluidisation in the range 1.02 to 1.73 MJ/m.sup.3 K and a flowability in the range 60 to 86.
- 2. The method of claim 1 wherein the mixture includes a particulate material selected from the group consisting of .alpha.-alumina, zircon, silicon carbide, spheroidal iron oxide and mixtures thereof.
- 3. The method of claim 2 wherein the glass is a sheet of soda-lime-silica glass having a thickness in the range 2 mm. to 2.5 mm. which is heated to a temperature in the range 610.degree. C. to 680.degree. C. and the toughened glass sheet has a central tensile stress in the range 35 to 57 MPa.
- 4. The method of claim 1 wherein the mixture includes at least one particulate metal oxide whose thermal capacity per unit volume at minimum fluidisation is in the range 1.77 to 2.01 MJ/m.sup.3 K and wherein the mixture has a thermal capacity per unit volume at minimum fluidisation in the range 1.5 to 1.73 MJ/m.sup.3 K and a flowability in the range 73 to 78.
- 5. A method of thermally toughening glass comprising:
- heating the glass to a temperature above its strain point;
- chilling the hot glass by contact with a gas-fluidised particulate material which comprises a mixture in predetermined proportions of at least one particulate metal oxide whose thermal capacity per unit volume at minimum fluidisation is in the range 1.76 to 2.01 MJ/m.sup.3 K and at least one particulate material having gas-generating properties;
- selecting as the gas-generating particulate material a material which is capable of evolving from 4% to 37% of its own weight of gas when heated to a constant weight at 800.degree. C., said gas-generating particulate material being selected from the group consisting of .gamma.-alumina, aluminum trihydrate, aluminum monohydrate, aluminosilicate, and sodium bicarbonate; and
- mixing said selected particulate materials in predetermined proportions which are tailored to impart to the mixture a thermal capacity per unit volume at minimum fluidisation in the range 1.27 to 1.76 MJ/m.sup.3 K and a flowability in the range 73 to 78.
- 6. A method of thermally toughening glass comprising:
- heating the glass to a predetermined temperature above its strain point;
- contacting the hot glass with a gas-fluidised particulate material which comprises a mixture of selected particulate materials, including a particulate .gamma.-alumina and a particulate .alpha.-alumina, which .gamma.-alumina has gas-generating properties when heated by said hot glass; and
- mixing said selected particulate .gamma.-alumina and particulate .alpha.-alumina in selected predetermined proportions which are tailored to impart to the mixture a thermal capacity and flowability such that required toughening stresses are induced by the gas-fluidised mixture in the glass.
- 7. A method according to claim 6, wherein the mixture comprises from 7% to 86% by weight of .gamma.-alumina and from 93% to 14% by weight of .alpha.-alumina.
- 8. A method of thermally toughening glass comprising:
- heating the glass to a temperature above its strain point;
- contacting the hot glass with a gas-fluidised mixture of selected particulate materials including a proportion of .gamma.-alumina having gas-generating properties when heated by said hot glass; and
- tailoring the proportions of the .gamma.-alumina and at least one other particulate material in said mixture to impart to the mixture a thermal capacity, determined as the thermal capacity per unit volume at minimum fluidisation and a flowability, such that predetermined toughening stresses are induced in the glass as it cools in said gas-fluidised mixture.
- 9. A method according to claim 8, wherein the mixture comprises aluminum trihydrate (Al.sub.2 O.sub.3.3H.sub.2 O) and .gamma.-alumina in equal proportions.
- 10. A method of thermally toughening glass comprising:
- heating the glass to a predetermined temperature above its strain point;
- contacting the hot glass with a gas-fluidised particulate material which comprises from 8 to 10% by weight of a particulate aluminosilicate which has gas-generating properties when heated by hot glass and from 92 to 90% by weight of .alpha.-alumina; and
- mixing said aluminosilicate and .alpha.-alumina in selected predetermined proportions which are tailored to impart to the mixture a thermal capacity, determined as the thermal capacity per unit volume at minimum fluidisation, and a flowability such that required toughening stresses are induced in the glass as it cools in the gas-fluidised mixture.
- 11. A method according to claim 10, wherein the aluminosilicate is zeolite.
- 12. A method of thermally toughening glass comprising:
- heating the glass to a predetermined temperature above its strain point;
- contacting the hot glass with a gas-fluidised particulate material which comprises particulate aluminum monohydrate (Al.sub.2 O.sub.3.1H.sub.2 O) and at least one inert particulate material selected from the group consisting of .alpha.-alumina, silicon carbide and zircon; and
- mixing the aluminum monohydrate and the inert material in selected predetermined proportions which are tailored to impart to the mixture a thermal capacity and flowability such that required toughening stresses are induced by said gas-fluidised mixture in the glass.
- 13. A method according to claim 12, wherein the mixture comprises from 17% to 20% by weight of aluminum monohydrate and from 83 to 80% by weight of .alpha.-alumina.
- 14. A method according to claim 12, wherein the mixture comprises from 17% to 20% by weight of aluminum monohydrate and from 83% to 80% by weight of silicon carbide.
- 15. A method according to claim 12, wherein the mixture comprises 17% by weight of aluminum monohydrate mixed with 83% by weight of silicon carbide.
- 16. A method according to claim 12, wherein the mixture comprises from 10% to 70% by weight of aluminum monohydrate and from 90% to 30% by weight of zircon.
- 17. A method according to claim 12, wherein the mixture comprises 20% by weight of aluminum monohydrate and 80% by weight of zircon (ZrO.sub.2.SiO.sub.2).
- 18. A method of thermally toughening glass comprising:
- heating the glass to a predetermined temperature above its strain point;
- contacting the hot glass with a gas-fluidised particulate material which comprises a mixture of particulate .gamma.-alumina having gas-generating properties with at least one particulate metal oxide whose thermal capacity per unit volume at minimum fluidisation is in the range 1.76 to 2.01 MJ/m.sup.3 K; and
- mixing the .gamma.-alumina and metal oxide in selected predetermined proportions which are tailored such that required toughening stresses are induced in the glass as it cools in said gas-fluidised mixture.
- 19. A method according to claim 18, wherein the metal oxide is spheroidal iron oxide (.alpha.-Fe.sub.2 O.sub.3).
- 20. A method according to claim 19, wherein the mixture comprises from 30% to 70% by weight of spheroidal iron oxide.
- 21. A method according to claim 19, wherein the mixture comprises from 35% to 70% by weight of spheroidal iron oxide.
- 22. A method according to claim 21, wherein the mixture comprises from 30% to 70% by weight of .gamma.-alumina.
- 23. A method according to claim 20, wherein the mixture comprises 30% by weight of .gamma.-alumina and 70% by weight of spheroidal iron oxide.
- 24. A method according to claim 19, wherein the mixture comprises from 28% to 35% by weight of spheroidal iron oxide and from 45% to 56% by weight of .alpha.-alumina, the remainder being .gamma.-alumina as gas-generating material.
- 25. A method according to claim 19, wherein the mixture comprises 20% by weight of .gamma.-alumina, 45% by weight of .alpha.-alumina and 35% by weight of spheroidal iron oxide.
- 26. A method of thermally treating glass comprising heating the glass to a predetermined temperature, contacting the hot glass with a gas-fluidised particulate material which comprises a mixture of a number of selected particulate materials, at least one of said particulate materials being capable of evolving from 4% to 37% of its own weight of gas when heated to a constant weight at 800.degree. C., and mixing said selected materials in selected predetermined proportions which are tailored to impart to the mixture of particulate materials a thermal capacity, determined as the thermal capacity per unit volume at minimum fluidisation in the range 1.02 to 1.73 MJ/m.sup.3 K, and a flowability in the range 60 to 86 such that a required thermal treatment of the glass by the gas-fluidised mixture is achieved whereby the tailored mixture imparts higher stresses than the stresses which could be achieved by any of the constituents of the tailored mixture used alone.
- 27. A method of thermally toughening glass comprising:
- heating the glass to a temperature above its strain point;
- chilling the hot glass by contact with a gas-fluidised particulate material which comprises a mixture in predetermined proportions of a number of selected particulate materials, at least one of which has gas-generating properties;
- selecting as the gas-generating particulate material a material which is capable of evolving from 4% to 37% of its own weight of gas when heated to a constant weight at 800.degree. C.; and
- mixing said selected particulate materials in predetermined proportions which are tailored to impart to the mixture a thermal capacity per unit volume at minimum fluidisation in the range 1.02 to 1.73 MJ/m.sup.3 K and a flowability in the range 60 to 86, whereby the tailored mixture imparts higher toughening stresses than the stresses which could be achieved by any of the constituents of the tailored mixture used alone.
- 28. A method of thermally toughening glass comprising:
- heating the glass to a temperature above its strain point;
- chilling the hot glass by contact with a gas-fluidised particulate material which comprises a mixture in predetermined proportions of a number of selected particulate materials, at least one of which has gas-generating properties;
- placing the gas-fluidised particulate material in a quiescent uniformly expanded state of particulate fluidisation by control of the distribution of fluidising gas in the particulate material at a gas flow velocity through the particulate material between that velocity corresponding to minimum fluidisation and that velocity corresponding to maximum expansion of the particulate material;
- selecting the gas-generating particulate material from the group consisting of .gamma.-alumina, aluminium trihydrate, aluminium monohydrate, aluminosilicate and sodium bicarbonate; and mixing said selected particulate materials in predetermined proportions which are tailored to impart to the mixture a thermal capacity per unit volume at minimum fluidisation in the range 1.02 to 1.73 MJ/m.sup.3 K and a flowability in the range 60 to 80.
- 29. The method of claim 28, wherein the mixture includes a particulate material selected from the group consisting of .alpha.-alumina, zircon, silicon carbide, spheroidal iron oxide and mixtures thereof.
- 30. A method of thermally treating glass comprising:
- heating the glass to a predetermined temperature;
- contacting the hot glass with a gas-fluidised particulate material which comprises a mixture of a number of selected particulate materials, at least one of said particulate materials being capable of evolving from 4% to 37% of its own weight of gas when heated to a constant weight at 800.degree. C.;
- placing said gas-fluidised particulate material in a quiescent uniformly expanded state of particulate fluidisation by control of the distribution of fluidising gas in the particulate material at a gas flow velocity through the particulate material between that velocity corresponding to minimum fluidisation and that velocity corresponding to maximum expansion of the particulate material; and
- mixing said selected materials in selected predetermined proportions which are tailored to impart to the mixture of particulate materials a thermal capacity, determined as the thermal capacity per unit volume at minimum fluidisation, in the range 1.02 to 1.73 MJ/m.sup.3 K, and a flowability in the range 60 to 86 such that a required thermal treatment of the glass by the gas-fluidised mixture is achieved whereby the tailored mixture imparts higher stresses than the stresses which could be achieved by any of the constituents of the tailored mixture used alone.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
33575/78 |
Aug 1978 |
GBX |
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CROSS-REFERENCES TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This is a continuation of application Ser. No. 136,750, filed Apr. 2, 1980, and a continuation-in-part of co-pending application Ser. No. 24,988 filed Mar. 29, 1979; and a continuation of application Ser. No. 934,727 filed Aug. 21, 1978, all now abandoned. The disclosure of the aforesaid applications is hereby incorporated by reference.
US Referenced Citations (4)
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
2132289 |
Nov 1972 |
FRX |
Non-Patent Literature Citations (1)
Entry |
"Annealing and Fluidized-Bed Quenching of Nimonic-Alloy Sheets", I. Astley et al., Sheet Metal Industries, Sep. 62, pp. 601-608. |
Continuations (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
136750 |
Apr 1980 |
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