Author/Authors :
Trevor E. Wilantewicz، نويسنده , , James R. Varner، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
The Vickers indentation behavior of five commercial
glasses has been investigated as a function of
temperature. The glasses included: (i) soda-lime-silica Float
glass, (ii) lead-alkali silicate, (iii) 7740 PyrexTM borosilicate,
(iv) potassium phosphate, and (v) lanthanum borate. A
recording microindentation system was constructed to allow
Vickers indentation testing to be conducted at temperatures
significantly above room temperature. The Vickers hardness
was observed to decrease continuously with increasing
temperature for all glasses, with the exception of the 7740
PyrexTM glass. Decreases in hardness were attributed to
decreases in elastic moduli and bond strength with increasing
temperature. The lengths of median-radial cracks around
indentations in several glasses were observed to first
increase, and then decrease, with increasing temperature.
The first of this behavior was attributed to initial increases of
the crack driving force, characterized by the quantity (E/H),
as well as to a decrease in fracture surface energy. Viscous
flow at higher temperatures was believed responsible for a
reduction in the crack driving force and crack tip stress,
resulting in an eventual decrease in crack length. Viscoelastic
behavior of the Float glass was characterized by a
rate-dependent hardness and indentation crack pattern.
Load–displacement traces indicated an increase in the work
of indentation and residual indentation depthwith increasing
temperature for all glasses.