Abstract

The tempering process of plate glass involves rapidly cooling the high-temperature glass using an array of impinging air jets, inducing desired stress during cooling. Consequently, the formation of tempering stress results from the coupled interaction among flow, heat transfer, and stress. However, most previous studies have commonly neglected the influence of the flow field by assuming a uniform and constant distribution of heat transfer coefficients at different positions on the glass plate, which deviates from actual situations. This study employed a fluid-thermal-structural coupled simulation approach to predict the non-uniform residual stress distribution in tempered glass and investigate the interaction mechanisms among flow, heat transfer, and stress. Simultaneously, to validate the reliability of the method and model, this study experimentally investigated the single-nozzle jet impingement cooling for glass tempering. The study concluded that the simulation results were consistent with the experiment. Subsequently, a comparative analysis was performed between the fluid-thermal-structural coupled simulation results based on real boundary conditions and the thermal-structural coupled simulation results based on ideal uniform heat transfer coefficient boundary conditions. The results revealed non-uniform distributions of both heat transfer coefficient and temperature due to varying localized flow characteristics. Consequently, the ratio of surface compressive stress to internal tensile stress along the width direction of the glass was not a fixed value but ranged from 1.63 to 2.38. Furthermore, significant differences were observed in the stress distribution under the simulations of fluid-thermal-structural coupling and thermal-structural coupling. Therefore, it is recommended to employ the fluid-thermal-structural coupling method when predicting localized stress distribution.

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