In this hybrid experimental, theoretical and numerical study the effect of chemical strengthening residual stress on the flexural strength and fracture behavior of aluminosilicate glass was investigated. Three-point bending tests were conducted on annealed and chemically strengthened glass specimens to obtain the flexural strength of both specimens and with the aid of high-speed cameras, the fracture and failure modes of these two kinds of specimens were analyzed and compared. A theoretical analysis based on the elastic fracture mechanics theory was employed to explain the strengthening effect of chemically strengthened glass. It is shown that the mechanical strength of chemically strengthened glass is highly related to the relation of the chemically strengthened layer depth and the surface flaw depth. Furthermore, this study provides an effective numerical approach to replicate the mechanical strength and failure modes for both annealed and chemically strengthened glass. The proposed finite element numerical method includes modeling techniques which consider the presence of pre-stress, random distributed surface flaws and the fracture onset in glass specimens. The residual stress pattern was defined exploiting the dynamic relaxation process for temperature-induced expansion of the elements before the loading process. Discrete distributed surface flaws were inserted in the model, the brittle fracture of glass was represented by the smeared crack method and the numerical results were compared to experimental data. It's illustrated that the proposed method can be used to represent both the discrete fracture behavior and the chemically-strengthening effect of silicate glass.

Effect of chemical strengthening residual stress on the flexural performance and fracture behavior of aluminosilicate glass

Wang Z.;Manes A.
2021-01-01

Abstract

In this hybrid experimental, theoretical and numerical study the effect of chemical strengthening residual stress on the flexural strength and fracture behavior of aluminosilicate glass was investigated. Three-point bending tests were conducted on annealed and chemically strengthened glass specimens to obtain the flexural strength of both specimens and with the aid of high-speed cameras, the fracture and failure modes of these two kinds of specimens were analyzed and compared. A theoretical analysis based on the elastic fracture mechanics theory was employed to explain the strengthening effect of chemically strengthened glass. It is shown that the mechanical strength of chemically strengthened glass is highly related to the relation of the chemically strengthened layer depth and the surface flaw depth. Furthermore, this study provides an effective numerical approach to replicate the mechanical strength and failure modes for both annealed and chemically strengthened glass. The proposed finite element numerical method includes modeling techniques which consider the presence of pre-stress, random distributed surface flaws and the fracture onset in glass specimens. The residual stress pattern was defined exploiting the dynamic relaxation process for temperature-induced expansion of the elements before the loading process. Discrete distributed surface flaws were inserted in the model, the brittle fracture of glass was represented by the smeared crack method and the numerical results were compared to experimental data. It's illustrated that the proposed method can be used to represent both the discrete fracture behavior and the chemically-strengthening effect of silicate glass.
2021
Aluminosilicate glass
Chemical strengthening
Flexural strength
Fracture mode
Residual stress
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11311/1195517
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