Abstract

Cooper–Krohn analysis of stress generation in soda lime silicate (“SLS”) glasses during ion exchange strengthening suggests that the glass should develop 2.5 to 3GPa surface compression (biaxial stress), though only ~600MPa values are observed experimentally. In this paper, we suggest that this “network dilation anomaly” is largely resolved. MD simulations were carried out to monitor volume and pressure changes after ion-swap. Surface compression in an SLS glass ion-exchanged as a function of temperature and time in KNO3 bath was measured to follow the viscous relaxation. We show that biaxial surface compression builds initially to the expected ~2.5GPa; thereafter fast secondary structural (“β”) relaxations, whose time constants span picoseconds to nanoseconds, cause the surface compression to relax rapidly to ~1.5GPa at the ion exchange temperature. Stress relaxes thereafter due to “α” primary structural relaxations associated with viscous flow. Recovery occurs to a transition state which is somewhat short of the expected glass volume. Full volume is recovered at higher temperatures due to increased flow.

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