. Medical and Hospital News .




TECH SPACE
Safety glass - cut to any shape
by Staff Writers
Freiburg, Germany (SPX) Oct 30, 2012


Model cut: a new process makes it possible to seperate safety glass into any desired shape. Image courtesy Fraunhofer.

Shock-resistance is the great benefit of safety glass. However, the cut of the glass pane can make this difficult: With conventional processes, only straight cuts are possible. Yet a newly-developed method makes it possible to apply any cutting technique. Researchers will display an undulating-cut pane of safety glass at the Glasstec trade fair in Dusseldorf.

If an object slams into the glass facade of a high-rise building, the glass must not shatter and fall down, because it could harm pedestrians below. In addition, the window panes must hold if a person were to fall against it from the inside. Architects and builders therefore must use something stronger than laminated safety glass on the facades of high rise buildings.

The same applies to the windshields on cars. Safety glass prevents passengers in an accident from getting hurt by glass shards. And shop windows made of safety glass are expected to reliably safeguard the displayed goods from thieves.

The principle behind this glass: a tear-proof film is inserted between two panes of glass, thus making the glass shock resistant. If glass fragments arise, they stay attached to the film. Safety glass panes are produced in panels measuring 6 x 3.20 meters, which are subsequently cut-to-size as required.

Since the inserted film is tear-proof, the glass pane cannot simply be cut apart. First, both glass panes encasing the film are carved and fractured.

Then, the break line is heated with an infrared heating element. The heat softens the film, and the halves are forcibly pulled apart until a knife can be guided through the gap. But this method has a drawback: It only allows for straight-line cuts.

If architects want extravagantly shaped windows, like round ones, the standard practice is for the safety glass panes to be carved and detached by hand. However, the resulting gap is too small to allow enough space for a knife, which could also inadvertently sever the film.

To widen the gap, and ultimately to be able to cut the desired form, the film is softened with heat by applying alcohol and setting it alight.

A new method will soon be able to circumvent this dangerous procedure. Researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute for Mechanics of Materials IWM in Freiburg, working jointly with Hegla, have engineered a new process.

"We cut the interior film before the glass is scored and broken apart," explains Tobias Rist, scientist at Fraunhofer IWM. "We use a laser beam that can be guided over the pane as desired. This is why we are also able to cut unusual geometries."

The laser beam penetrates the glass and releases its energy primarily in the film. The film gets hot enough for it to melt and vaporize. With this method a channel is produced in the film, and the film is separated locally. When the film is "cut," the glass is carved and fractured parallel to the resulting film channel. "The process can be readily automated and applied on an industrial scale," says Rist.

Researchers will exhibit safety glass that features an undulating dividing line at the Glasstec trade fair in Dusseldorf.

The laser process is operationally ready; Hegla will integrate it into a new laminated safety-glass pattern cutting system, and optimize it for industrial use.

Hegla has already been granted a German and a European patent for the process of carving contours. The researchers are now working on another step that will make the process even faster, thereby increasing clock speed.

.


Related Links
Fraunhofer
Space Technology News - Applications and Research






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle




Memory Foam Mattress Review

Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News

Get Our Free Newsletters
Space - Defense - Environment - Energy - Solar - Nuclear

...





TECH SPACE
French Magpie start-up leaches gold from water with modern alchemy
Saint-Pierre-Les-Nemours, France (AFP) Oct 28, 2012
A small French start-up company is selling a technology with a hint of alchemy: turning water into gold. It does so by extracting from industrial waste water the last traces of any rare - and increasingly valuable - metal. "We leave only a microgramme per litre," according to Steve van Zutphen, a Dutchman who founded Magpie Polymers last year with a fellow 30-year old Frenchman Etienne ... read more


TECH SPACE
Storm leaves billions in damage across eastern US

Atlantic City bar faces hurricane with a drink

Obama races back to White House as hurricane threatens

Asia's mega-cities badly exposed to superstorms

TECH SPACE
Telit Introduces LTE Module Expanding Automotive Product Line with 4G for North American and European Markets

China launches another satellite for independent navigation system

Trimble Adds Boom Height Control to its Field-IQ Crop Input Control System

New INRIX Traffic App for Android Provides Relief from Soaring Gas Prices

TECH SPACE
Genetics suggest global human expansion

'Digital eternity' beckons as death goes high-tech

Primates' brains make visual maps using triangular grids

Lucy and Selam's species climbed trees

TECH SPACE
Far from random, evolution follows a predictable genetic pattern

Hanging in there: Koalas have low genetic diversity

How a fish broke a law of physics

Britain postpones controversial badger cull

TECH SPACE
New opportunity for rapid treatment of malaria

Test allows doctors to see disease without microscope

Plants provide accurate low-cost alternative for diagnosis of West Nile Virus

Migratory birds' ticks can spread viral haemorrhagic fever

TECH SPACE
After rare trip, US envoy urges China on Tibet

Wen family lawyers dispute NYT riches claim: report

Seven Tibetan self-immolations hit China in a week

China halts chemical plant following riots

TECH SPACE
West African pirates target oil tankers

Pirate killed off Somali coast: NATO

Somali pirates free ship after nearly two years: NATO

Dutch navy detains alleged Somali pirates after attack

TECH SPACE
Japan's Komatsu logs profit drop on weak China demand

Japan factory output tumbles ahead of BoJ meeting

Storm brings US East Coast economy to halt

US expects to release jobless data Friday as planned




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2012 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement