Abstract

The microhardness around a large indentation was measured for different types of glasses. In soda-lime silicate glass, a typical normal glass, the region in the immediate vicinity of the indentation was found to exhibit a lower hardness than the region far removed from the indentation. In silica glass, a typical anomalous glass, the region in the immediate vicinity of a large indentation was found to exhibit a higher hardness than the region far removed from the indentation. Asahi less brittle glass, an intermediate glass between normal and anomalous glasses, was found to exhibit little change in hardness in the vicinity of the large indentation. These findings can be explained by a deformation-induced fictive temperature increase leading to a lower hardness for soda-lime silicate glass and a higher hardness for silica glass.

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