Abstract

In the present paper, optical anisotropy effects in architectural glass are evaluated using digital image processing. Hereby, thermally toughened glass panes were analyzed quantitatively using a circular polariscope. Glass subjected to externally applied stresses or residual stresses becomes birefringent. Polarized light on birefringent materials causes interference colors (iridescence), referred to as anisotropies, which affect the optical appearance of glass panes in building envelopes. Thermally toughened glass, such as toughened safety glass or heat strengthened glass, show these iridescences due to thermally induced residual stress differences. RGB-photoelastic full-field methods allow the quantitative measurement of anisotropies, since the occurring interference colors are related to the measured retardation values. By calibrating the circular polariscope, retardation images of thermally toughened glass panes are generated from non-directional isochromatic images using computer algorithms. The analysis of the retardation images and the evaluation of the anisotropy quality of the glass is of great interest in order to detect and sort out very low quality glass panes directly in the production process. Therefore, in this paper retardation images are acquired from different thermally toughened glass panes then different image processing methods are presented and applied. It is shown that a general definition of exclusion zones, e.g. near edges is required prior to the evaluation. In parallel, the limitations in the application of first-order statistical and threshold methods are presented. The intend of the investigation is the extension of the texture analysis based on the generation of Grey Level Co-occurrence Matrices, where the spatial arrangement of the retardation values is considered in the evaluation. For the first time, the results of textural features of different glass pane formats could be compared using reference areas and geometry factors. By reduction of the original image size, the computation time of textural analysis algorithms could be remarkably speeded up, while the textural features remained the same. Finally, the knowledge gained from these investigations is used to determine uniform texture features, which also includes the pattern of anisotropy effects in the evaluation of thermally toughened glass. Together with a global evaluation criterion this can now be implemented in commercial anisotropy measurement systems for quality control of tempered architectural glass.

Highlights

  • Toughened glass is often used in architecturally ambitious buildings because of its high strength and thermal shock resistance

  • C and Cluster Prominence (C P) weighted the stripe pattern with high retardation from B08 as more striking and worse than sample B07. These glass panes could be classified as good quality and should cause less anisotropy when installed in the façade

  • In the presented paper optical anisotropy effects in thermally toughened architectural glass are quantified by full-field photoelastic measurements and evaluated by different methods of digital image processing

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Summary

Introduction

Toughened glass is often used in architecturally ambitious buildings because of its high strength and thermal shock resistance. The glass dimensions required for highquality façade projects can only be achieved sensibly with thermally toughened glass due to technical, economic and safety-related boundary conditions (fracture behavior). With this type of glass, optical phenomena can occur. When a polarized light beam enters a flat glass, it is split in two directions parallel to the principal stresses If these principal stresses are not equal, the two partial rays propagate at different velocities in the glass, resulting in a path difference after the light rays leave the glass. Since the human eye perceives the retardation of polarized daylight as interference colors (Sørensen 2013), this is directly related to visible anisotropy effects. Depending on the level of the retardations, weakly perceptible black and white patterns or strongly visible colored patterns will result

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