Abstract

Cast glass has great potential for diverse load-bearing, architectural applications; through casting, volumetric glass components can be made that take full advantage of glass’s stated compressive strength. However, the lack of engineering, production and quality control standards for cast glass and the intertwined ambiguities over its mechanical properties-particularly due to the variety in chemical compositions and the lack of understanding of the influence of flaws occurring in the glass bulk-act as an impediment to its wide-spread application. Addressing the above uncertainties, this work studies a total of 64 silicate-based glass specimens, prepared in 20 * 30 * 350 mm beam size, either by kiln-casting at relatively low forming temperatures (970–1120 ^{circ }C), or by modification of industrially produced glass. For the kiln-casting of the specimens, pure and contaminated recycled cullet are used, either individually or in combination (composite glasses). The defects introduced in the glass specimens during the casting process are identified with digital microscopy and qualitative stress analysis using cross polarized light, and are categorized as stress-inducing, strength-reducing or harmless. The Impulse Excitation Technique is employed to measure the Young’s modulus and internal friction of the different glasses. Differential Scanning Calorimetry is used on a selection of glasses, to investigate changes in the glass transition range and fictive temperature of the kiln-cast glasses due to the slower cooling and prolonged annealing. The four-point bending experiments are shedding light upon the flexural strength and stiffness of the different glasses, while the fractographic analysis pinpoints the most critical defects per glass category. The experiments show the flexural strength of cast glass ranging between 30–73 MPa, according to the level of contamination and the chemical composition. The measured E moduli by both methods are in close agreement, ranging between 60–79 GPa. The comparison of the flexural strength with prior testing of cast glass involving shorter span fixtures showed a decreasing strength with increasing size for the contaminated specimens, but similar strengths for pure compositions. The results highlight the versatile role of defects in determining the glass strength and the complexity that arises in creating statistical prediction models and performing quality control.

Highlights

  • Within the last two decades, have we seen architectural projects exploring the structural potential of cast glass components, such as the Atocha Memorial (Paech and Göppert 2008) and the Crystal Houses (Oikonomopoulou et al 2018a, b)

  • A variety of defects are encountered in the kiln-cast glass specimens, which are formed during: a

  • First the casting related defects (a) will be discussed, linking them to the casting parameters responsible for their formation. Thereafter, both casting (a) and post processing (b) defects will be evaluated, according to the effect they have on the glass, based on the characterization proposed by Aldinger and de Haan (2019) in: 13 One image pixel equals to 31.5 μm, given the software accuracy of 0.05 pixel, displacements larger than 1.57 μm are detected

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Summary

Introduction

Within the last two decades, have we seen architectural projects exploring the structural potential of cast glass components, such as the Atocha Memorial (Paech and Göppert 2008) and the Crystal Houses (Oikonomopoulou et al 2018a, b). Recent research by the authors has further shown that casting glass components for architectural applications can be a promising upcycling approach for currently discarded glass of a variety of chemical compositions (Oikonomopoulou et al 2018c; Bristogianni et al 2018, 2019). Despite the rising interest on cast glass from architects, designers and engineers, the lack of a standardized production method, quality control process and relevant engineering data and the intertwined knowledge gaps on the strength of such components, hinder the upscaling of its application. The presence of impurities in the batch and the high forming viscosities introduce inhomogeneities in the cast glass, creating unique identities of mechanical and aesthetical properties, closely related to glass composition and inherent defects

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Conclusion

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