Wednesday, 25 January 2023

Glass Sticking in Cast Iron Moulds


Cast iron bakeware moulds have achieved popularity in decorative glass casting. One problem that seems to be common is that the glass sticks in the mould when cooled.

 

A typical cast iron heart-shaped baking mould

Choosing

 When choosing the mould, try to avoid those with vertical sides. The glass will come out more easily if there is a slope from to top to the bottom of the mould cavity. But it doesn’t stop there.

 The surfaces of cast iron moulds are rough. In casting, the glass conforms exactly to the mould at higher temperatures. On cooling the iron contracts more than the glass, making "sticking" more likely.

Preparation

 Mould preparation should include grinding down the high points to make the mould surface smooth.

 Preparation should also include seasoning of the mould. Clean well with soapy water. Dry. Put a little mineral oil on a paper towel and wipe all the surfaces. Place the mould upside down on short posts. Fire to 300°C/570°F with a 30-minute soak and then turn off. The oil will burn off. You can place fibre paper underneath to catch any excess oil you may have put onto the mould surfaces.

 If you are using kiln wash as your separator, mix it thicker than usual, say 3 parts water to one of powder. This is to give a thick coating of separator on the mould. It may be that you need to heat the mould to avoid runs.

 If you are using boron nitride, it may be possible to add more layers. But this runs the risk of the separator coming off onto the glass.

 Firing

My final suggestion is to use lower temperatures combined with longer soaks.

Releasing

 If the glass still sticks to the mould, turn the mould over. Support the mould with brick or shelf pieces. Tap the back of the mould with a rubber mallet. Not too hard because cast iron is brittle. This most often shifts the glass.

 If the glass is still stuck, put the mould in the kiln upside down on posts a little above the shelf. Fire slowly (say 125°C/225°F) toward 540°C/1000°F. Program the anneal and cool you used previously. Observe frequently to know when the glass has fallen out of the mould. When the glass has separated from the mould, advance to the annealing segment.

 Of course, if the glass has fallen out of the mould by 400°C/750°F, you will not need the anneal soak, although you still will need the controlled cool. So, you can skip the anneal cool and go to the controlled cool down segments.

 

Wednesday, 18 January 2023

Problems when Slumping

A range of problems appear in slumping.  These include bubbles, splits, puddling and more. Several causes are possible.  This blog looks at the problems, possible causes and remedies.

Bubbles




Blocked Vent Holes

 Absence of, or blocked holes at the bottom of the mould to allow air out into the kiln on all but shallow or cylindrical moulds can be a cause of bubbles. Prop the mould up on stilts if the hole does not go directly from under the glass and out of the side of the mould. Alternatively, drill a hole in the side to allow the air to escape from under the mould.

Wet moulds

In kiln forming, the moisture resulting from recently applied kiln wash is considered by some to be a cause of bubbles. The water in the mould will be evaporated by around 250°C/482°F in any sensible slumping schedule. At this temperature, the glass will not have begun to move, so the moisture can move out of the mould through any vent holes at the bottom of the mould, or past the glass as it rests on the edge of the mould.

The circumstance when a damp slumping mould could cause difficulties is when using an extremely fast rise of temperature. This is detrimental to the mould also, as the rapid formation of steam is more likely to break the mould rather than the glass. It is also unlikely to result in a good slump conforming to the mould without significant marking.

In casting with wet plaster/silica moulds water vapour can move toward the glass. Casting practice has alleviated some of the problem, by having an extended steam out before 200°C/395°F, or pouring the glass into the hot dry mould from a reservoir.

In pate de verre, the mould is most often packed while wet. The small particles normally allow any steaming of moisture to pass through, and so be dry at forming temperatures without blowing any bubbles.

Top Temperature

Bubbles at the bottom of the glass are much more likely to be the result of too high a process temperature if the previous two conditions are met. This high temperature allows the glass to slide down the mould.  The glass is not plastic enough to thicken and form a puddle at the bottom at most slumping temperatures. Instead, it begins to be pushed up from the lowest point due to the weight of the glass sliding down the sides.

 

Avoiding uprisings on the bottom of bowls.

Vent Holes

Make sure the holes are clear before placing the glass.

Wet Moulds

Ensure that the moulds are no more than damp before placing in the kiln.

Top Temperature

Firing for too long or at too high a temperature will cause the glass to continue sliding down. Having nowhere else to go, the bottom begins rising. This is the result of the weight of glass pressing down onto the bottom, especially on steep-sided moulds. This is a consistent experience across several kilns and with multiple users.

Low Slumping Temperatures.

Glass at low temperatures is affected largely by its weight and viscosity.

Viscosity Effects

Thick glass will fall more slowly than thin, when using the same schedule. Thick glass takes longer to equalise the upper and lower surface temperatures. Since the lower surface is stiffer (has a higher viscosity) it will move less using the same heat up rate. This means slower rates should be used, or a significant soak just above the strain point will be required. This softening of the glass evenly throughout the rise to the top temperature is critical in obtaining even slumps.



Splits in slumps

Without the slow progress to top temperature there can be problems. Sometimes the upper surface of the slump appears fine. It is the bottom that exhibits a split or tear that does not go all the way to the upper surface of the glass. It indicates the rate of advance was too - but only just - too fast to achieve the desired result.

 The ramp rate has been quick enough to get the top heated and become plastic. But the lower surface is still cold enough that it is brittle. The weight of the upper softened glass begins to push down before the bottom has become hot enough to be fully plastic. The force of the weight on the bottom can be enough to cause the glass to separate, rather than move as the surface does. This split on the bottom but not the top indicates a slower rate for that thickness is required. This shows the interaction between viscosity and weight.

 Sometimes the split is evident from the top. The cause of this kind of split is the same as a split on the bottom. But the ramp rate has been much faster in relation to the thickness or profile of the piece.



Weight

It is possible to have glass slightly overhang slumping moulds if you use low temperatures. The glass has the appearance of behaving differently at these low temperatures than at fusing temperatures.  

 

At low temperatures it cannot form exactly to the mould. It falls first in the middle. Because the glass is not very plastic, the edges rise up from the mould at first, because the weight there is not great enough to allow the unsupported glass to bend. The edges stay in line with the beginning of the bend in the middle.  

 

At the beginning of the slump the glass is not soft enough to stretch. It maintains its dimensions as it falls. For deep moulds, the glass moves progressively to move over the lip of the mould and begins to fall into the mould.



As the slump proceeds, the glass stretches very little and so the edges move further down the mould. The glass continues to slide down at the edges until the centre settles down onto the mould bottom. 



During this slide into place, the glass can become marked. This is usually most evident on back of the upper portions of the glass where most sliding is happening.

 With higher than necessary temperatures, the glass can continue to slide down the mould. Since the glass is still not fully plastic, the weight pushes the glass at the bottom upwards. This gives the appearance of a bubble, but is an uprising due to the pressure of the glass at the sides of the mould.

 


During the sliding of the glass along the mould, it becomes more marked. The marks often look like stretch marks. And in many senses, it is exactly that.

At higher temperatures or longer holds, the glass softens more. At this point the uprising collapses and the glass begins to thicken at the bottom. It also thins slightly at the top.


Remedies

Ramp Rates

The ramp rates should be slow.

  • ·        This allows the glass to heat evenly throughout. This is important to get even slumps. 
  •          Contrasting colours or a combination of opalescent and transparent glasses heat evenly with slow rates.
  • ·        Slow rates allow glass with tack profiles to heat evenly.
  • ·        It helps avoid splits in the bottom of slumped glass.
  • ·        It allows lower slump temperature to be used.

Low Temperatures

Using the lowest practical slumping temperature gives the best results.

  • ·        It allows glass with small overhangs of the mould to be successfully slumped.
  • ·        Low temperature reduces the mould marks on the back of the glass.
  • ·        Fewer stretch marks are in evidence.
  • ·        Low slumping temperatures with long soaks reduce the uneven slump that is sometimes in evidence with deeper moulds.
  • ·        Low temperatures allow different colours to heat more evenly.
  • ·        Low temperatures reduce the thinning or thickening of glass in a high temperature slump.

More information is available here.

This information shows you need to keep the slumping temperature to the minimum required. To find out what that temperature is, watch the slumping in stages in brief peeks (do not stare!). Look at the piece for a second or two every five minutes before you reach your desired temperature and at intervals throughout the hold.

If it has slumped completely at the beginning of the hold, you are firing too high. Reduce your temperature in subsequent firings and watch in the same way to find what the required temperature and time is. There is absolutely no substitute in slumping but to watch by peeking to learn what your mould and glass require. 

What Temperature?

To determine the temperature needed for your piece, use slow ramp rates – between 100°C to 150°C/ 180°F to 270°F. Set your top temperature around 630°C/1170°F for a simple slump of fusing glass. For bottle or window glass you will need a temperature closer to 720°C/1330°F.

It is necessary to observe the progress of the slump as you do not know the best slumping temperature. Start watching the glass at about 10-minute intervals from about 600°C/1110°F. There is not much light in the kiln at this temperature, so an external light is useful. You can also observe the reflections of the elements on the glass. When the image of the elements begins to curve, you know the glass is beginning to bend. You then know that is the lowest possible slumping temperature when using that ramp rate.

Hold for at least 30 mins at the temperature when the glass begins to visibly drop. This may or may not be long enough. Continue checking at 5-10 minute intervals to know when the slump is complete. If the glass is completely slumped before the soak time is finished, advance to the next segment. If not fully slumped, you need to extend the soak time. These operations mean you need to know how to alter your schedule while firing. Consult your controller manual to learn how to do these things. Stop the hold when complete and advance to the anneal.

In some cases, you may need to increase temperature you set by 5-10°C. You can do this by scheduling a couple of segments with 10°C/18°F higher temperature each and 30 minute soaks each.  If you do not need them, you can skip them. If you do need the extra temperature, you have it scheduled already.  You will know if you need the extra segments by whether the glass has begun to curve at the start of the first of the soaks.  If it has not after 10 minutes, skip to the next segment. Once the new temperature has been reached, check for a curve in the glass. Again, if after 10 minutes there is no curve, skip to the next (higher temperature) segment.

A low temperature slump will allow the glass to conform to the shape of the mould without softening so much that it takes up all the markings of the mould. That in turn means there are spaces for the air to escape from under the glass all the way to the slumping temperature as well as through the air holes at the bottom. It also gives the most mark-free slump possible for your shape.

If you are slumping at such a temperature that the glass has sealed to the mould, you are firing too hot anyway. Or put more positively, use a low temperature slump, that is, a slump at the lowest temperature to achieve the desired result over an extended period of your choice.


More information is available in the eBook Low Temperature Kilnforming available through Etsy or Bullseye.

Wednesday, 11 January 2023

Annealing Requirements for Shaped Pieces.

 Experiments related to slumping show that shaped items such as slumped, textured and kiln carved glass need annealing for at least one layer thicker than they are. The annealing for one layer thicker than the calculated thickness provides the most stress-free result for the finished product. Annealing for the calculated thickness does not always produce a stress-free result.  

Full Fuse

 This indicates that an evenly thick 6mm thick piece will get the best result from an anneal as for 9mm.

Texture Moulds

 A piece of glass on a texture mould with 3mm or more differences in height requires careful annealing. The more defined/sharper the texture, the greater care will be required. A 6mm blank on a mould with 3mm variation taken to a well-defined texture needs to be annealed as though it were 18mm thick. A sharp tack requires annealing as for a piece 2.5 times its actual thickness plus another 3mm.  This gives the 18mm/0.75” thickness annealing requirement for the 6mm thick piece.

Kiln Carvings

 The same kind of calculation applies to kiln carved items as for sharply textured pieces. Pieces with less sharply defined profiles can be treated as one of the more common tack fused profiles.


Credit: Vitreus-art.co.uk

Tack Fusings

 A rounded tack fused piece of a 6mm base with 3mm tack elements that is being slumped will need annealing as for 21mm.  Twice the actual thickness plus 3mm giving the annealing requirement as for 21mm/0.827”.

 A contour tack of the same dimensions as given in the first example will require annealing as for 19mm/0.75”. The annealing requirement when slumping is for 1.5 times the thickness plus another 3mm.

In General

 The general approach to annealing shaped pieces is to calculate the thickness for the anneal and add one layer more to get a good anneal for slumped and other formed pieces. 


 The research and the reasoning behind this approach is given in LowTemperature Kilnforming, An Evidenced-Based Guide to Scheduling available from the Etsy shop VerrierStudio and from Bullseye

Wednesday, 4 January 2023

Effects of Dam Materials on Scheduling

 I once made a statement about the effects of various dam materials on scheduling. This was based on my understanding of the density of three common refractory materials used in kilnforming – ceramic shelves, vermiculite board and fibre board. I decided to test these statements.  This showed I was wrong in my assumptions.

I set up a test of the heat gain and loss of the three materials. This was done without any glass involved to eliminate the influence of the glass on the behaviour of the dams. The dam materials were laid on the kiln shelf with thermocouples between. These were connected to a data logger to record the temperatures.


Test Setup

 The thicknesses of the dams may be relevant. The vermiculite and fibre boards were 25mm thick. The ceramic dam material was 13mm thick.

The schedule used was a slightly modified one for 6mm:

  • 300°C/hr to 800°C for 10 minutes
  • Full to 482°C for 60 minutes
  • 83°C to 427, no soak
  • 150°C to 370°C, no soak
  • 400°C to 100°C, end

 

The data retrieved from the data recording is shown by the following graphs.


Temperature profile of the air, ceramic, fibre, and vermiculite during the firing.

Highlights:

  • The dam materials all perform similarly.
  • This graph shows the dams have significant differences from the air temperature – up to 190°C – during the first ramp of 300°C/hr. (in this case).
  • There is the curious fall in the dams’ temperatures during the anneal soak. This was replicated in additional tests. I do not currently know the reasons for this.
  • The dams remain cooler than the air temperature until midway during the second cool when (in this kiln) the natural cooling rate takes over.
  • From the second cool to the finish, the dams remain hotter than the air temperature.

 Some more information is given by looking at the temperature differentials (ΔT) between the materials and the air. This graph is to assist in investigating how significantly different the materials are.

This graph is initially confusing as positive numbers indicate the temperature of the first is cooler than the material it is compared with, and hotter when in negative numbers.

 

A= air; C=ceramic; F=fibre board; V=vermiculite

Temperature variations between air and dams

 As an assistance to relating the ΔT to the air temperature some relevant data points are given. The data points relate to the numbers running along the bottom of the graph.

 Data Point       Event

  • 1            Start of anneal soak.
  • 30          Start of 1st cool (482°C)
  • 45          Start of 2nd cool (427°C)
  • 65          Start of final cool (370°C)
  • 89          1st 55°C of final cool (315°C)
  • 306         100°C

 

At the data points:

  • At the start of anneal soak the ΔT between the dams is 16°C with the ceramic shelf temperature being 18°C hotter than the air.
  • At the end of the anneal soak of an hour, the air temperature is 20°C higher, although the ΔT between the dams has reduced to 12°C.
  • At the end of the 1st cool the ΔT between the dams has reduced to 9°C and the ΔT with the air is 3°C.
  • At approximately 450°C the air temperature becomes less than the dams.
  • At 370°C the hottest dams are approximately 17°C hotter than the air.  The ΔT between the dams is 10°C.

 More generally:

  • The air temperature tends to be between 17°C hotter and 17°C cooler than the ceramic dams during the anneal soak and cool.  The difference gradually decreases to around 8°C at about 120°C.
  • Ceramic and fibre dams loose heat after the annealing soak at similar rates – having a ΔT between 4°C and 1°C, with a peak difference of 9°C at the start of the second cool. This means the heat retention characteristics of ceramic strips and fibre board are very close.
  • Between the annealing soak and about 300°C the vermiculite is between 12°C and 9°C hotter than the same thickness of fibre.  Vermiculite both gains and loses heat more slowly than the ceramic or fibre dams do. This means that vermiculite is the most heat retentive of the three materials.
  • Vermiculite remains hotter than ceramic from the start of the second cool. This variance is up to 9°C and decreases to 3°C by 100°C.
  • Fibre board is cooler than ceramic dams until the final cool starts, when there is little variance.  At the start of the second cool there is about 15°C between the two.
  • Vermiculite remains cooler than fibre dams throughout the cooling process. This ranges from about 12°C at the start of the first cool to about 3°C at 100°C.


Since we cannot see more than the air temperature on our controllers it is useful to compare air and dam temperatures. The same data points apply as the graph comparing differences between materials.

 

Ceramic-Vermiculite; Ceramic-Fibre Board; Vermiculite-Fibre Board; Ceramic-Air Temperature
This graph shows the temperature differences throughout the cooling of various materials.

  • During the annealing soak, the air temperature is greater than the dam temperatures. The fibre and vermiculite boards remain at similar temperatures and the ceramic dam is the coolest.
  • The three dam materials even out with the air temperature at the start of the second cool.
  • Through the second and final cools, vermiculite dams remain hotter than the air temperature – between about 24°C at start of the final cool and 9°C at 100°C.
  • The ceramic and fibre dams are close in temperature difference to the air from the start of the final cool. Their ΔTs are 17°C at the start of the final cool and 6°C at 100°C.


Conclusions

  • Dams will have little effect during the heat up of open face dammed glass.  The slight difference will be at the interface of the glass and the dams where there will be a slight cooling effect on the glass. Therefore, a slightly longer top soak or a slightly higher top temperature may be useful.
  • The continued fall in the dams’ temperature during the anneal soak indicates that this soak should be extended to ensure heat is not being drained from the edges of the glass by the dams. There is the risk of creating unequal temperatures across the glass.
  • The ability of ceramic and fibre dams to absorb and dissipate heat more quickly indicates that they are better materials for dams than vermiculite board. The slightly better retention of heat at the annealing soak, indicates that ceramic is a good choice when annealing is critical.        
  • These tests were fired as for 6mm/0.25” glass and so show the greatest differences. Firing for thicker glass will use longer soaks and slower cool rates. These will allow the dams to perform more closely to the glass temperature during annealing and cool.

Based on these observations, I have come to some conclusions about the effect of dams on scheduling.

  • There is no significant effect caused by dams during the heat up, so scheduling of the heat up can be as for the thickness of the glass.
  • The lag in temperature rise of the dams indicates a slightly longer soak at the top temperature (with a minor risk of devitrification), or a higher temperature of, say 10°C, can be used.
  • The (strange) continued cooling of the dams during the annealing soak indicates that extending the soak time to that for a piece 6mm thicker than actual is advisable.
  • The cool rates can continue to be as for the actual thickness, as the dam temperatures follow the air temperature with little deviation below the end of the first cool.
  • Ceramic dams of 13mm/ 0.5” perform better than 25mm/1.0” vermiculite and fibre board. 
  • However, in further tests of 25mm/1.0” thick ceramic dams performed similarly to the same thickness of vermiculite. So, 25mm/1.0” fibre board the best when choosing between the three materials of the same thickness. But 25mm ceramic strips are not common, nor are they needed for strength or weight.
  • The performance of the three dam materials tested do not show enough difference in temperature variation to have significant affects on the annealing and cooling at times and rates appropriate to the thickness of the glass.
  • It is the thermal insulation properties of the dam material, rather than the density that has the greatest influence on performance as a dam material.

 

 

Wednesday, 28 December 2022

Damming for Exact Shapes

 Many times, exact dimensions of the final piece are not critical.  When they are and the piece is 9mm and thicker, or has irregular amounts of glass near the edge, damming is required.

 If the dimensions are rectangular, you can use straight edged refractory materials, usually sawn up broken kiln shelves, vermiculite, or fibre board strips.  

 These need to be kiln washed and lined with fibre paper.  The dams should be lined with 3mm fibre paper that is 3mm narrower than the final height of the piece.  This allows a bullnose shape at the edge to form.





 If the shape is a circular or irregular shape the dams can be made from thick fibre board or vermiculite.  The lining of the dams is the same as for rectangular shapes.  

 The use of 3mm fibre paper means that you have to make rectangular shapes 6mm bigger in each direction to achieve the exact final dimensions.  For circular or irregular shapes, the edge will need to be only 3mm larger.  This is because the edge goes around the whole shape, rather than only one side.

 

Wednesday, 21 December 2022

Simultaneous Fusing and Slumping

“I sometimes slump at the same time as I do a tack fuse. Is slumping at this higher heat bad for the mould? “

Image credit: Creative Glass

Mould

 It is possibly not bad for the mould, but it does depend on your temperature and heat work.  Ceramic moulds are typically fired to 1200° or 1300°C so higher kilnforming temperatures are unlikely to affect the moulds.  The speed at which the target temperature is reached is of concern though.  Ceramics have what is called quartz inversions.

 Two of the constituents of ceramics – cristobalite and quartz – have significantly large expansions at 226°C and 570°C / 440°F and 1060°F.  Rapid rises through these two temperatures risks breaking the ceramic mould.  This is not the case with steel moulds, of course.

Glass

 There may also be effects on the glass.  Slumping typically ranges between 620°C to 677°C (1150°F to 1250°F).  Tack fusing typically is done in the 740°C to 790°C (1365°F to 1455°F)range.  This is a significant difference even at the higher end of the slumping range and the lower end of the tack fusing range. 

 Some of the effects are:

·        The marking of the slumped glass will be greater at tack fusing. 
·        The glass will slip down the mould more. 
·        Any pieces applied to the base are likely to slide during the slumping process.
·        There is a risk of creating an uprising or bubble at the bottom as the glass slips down the side of the mould. 
·        There is more risk of creating needle points at the edges.

 Performing two processes at the same time risks difficulties.  Inevitably, compromises will need to be made between slumping and tack fusing.  Eventually, it will come to a time when the two process won't work together.

  

A slump taken to tack fusing temperatures is at risk from uprisings at the bottom, needling at the edges, excessive marking on the back, slipping down the mould and thickening

Wednesday, 14 December 2022

Scientific Notes on Annealing

 The course from which this information is taken is based on float glass.  This is a soda lime glass just as fusing glass is.  The general observations – although not the temperatures – can be applied to fusing glasses.  This is a paraphrase of the course. It relates these observations to kilnforming.  The course is IMI-NFG Course on Processing in Glass, by Mathieu Hubert, PhD. 2015 

 

Viscosity vs. Temperature for a borosilicate glass
Graph credit: Schott

Viscosity Influence on Annealing

 Viscosity increases with reduction in temperature.  So high viscosity (low temps) cannot release stress; low viscosity (high temperature) cannot maintain shape – it will deform.  The range of viscosity is small.  The viscosity must not be so high that the stress cannot be relieved, nor must it be so low that the glass is unable to retain its shape. (p.6).  This indicates there is an inverse relationship between temperature and viscosity.  This is something we experience each time we fire. 

 The mathematical definition for strain point - high viscosity - is 1014.5 Poise.   And the annealing point as 1013.4 Poise, where if the glass is all the same temperature, the stress can be relieved in about 15 minutes.  (p.7-8)  

 As kilnformers we talk of the annealing range in terms of temperature, because that is what we can measure. The annealing occurs within a small range of viscosity. This has a relation to temperature that is not the same for all glass compositions. 

 The definition of the annealing as the range of viscosity at which annealing can occur is important.  

 First, the viscosity value remains the same over many types and styles of glass.  The temperature required to achieve that viscosity varies, leading to different annealing temperatures for different glass. 

 Second, there is a range of viscosity - and therefore temperature - during which annealing can occur.  The annealing point is 1013.4 Poise, at which viscosity the stresses in glass can most quickly be relieved (generally within 15 minutes for 3mm glass).  However, the stress can be relieved at greater viscosities up to almost the strain point - 1014.5 Poise. (p.8).  At higher temperatures, the glass becomes more flexible and cannot relieve stress.  At lower temperatures (beyond a certain point) it becomes so stiff that stress cannot be relieved.  Again, those temperatures are determined by the viscosity of the glass.

 

Annealing Soaks

 Annealing can take place at different points within the range.  Bullseye chose some years ago to recommend annealing at a higher viscosity, i.e., a lower temperature.  This has also been applied by Wissmach in their documentation although initially the published annealing point was almost 30°C higher. 

 The closer to the strain point that annealing is conducted, the longer it will take to relieve the stress.  Annealing at the strain point is possible, but it is impractical.  Apparently, it would take at least 15 hours for a 6mm thick piece (p.8). 

 However, the trade off in annealing a few degrees above the strain point – requiring longer annealing soaks – is reducing the amount of time required by the annealing cool, especially for thicker or more difficult items.

 A further advantage to annealing at lower temperatures and slower rates is that it results in a denser glass – one with lower volume (p.3). Arguably, a denser glass is a stronger one.

 


Annealing Cool

 After annealing, the glass should be cooled slowly and uniformly to avoid formation of internal stresses due to temperature differentials within the glass.  Stresses that are unrelieved above the strain point are permanent.  Stresses induced during cooling below the strain point are temporary, unless they are too great.  To avoid permanent stress, the cooling should be slow between anneal soak and strain point (p.9).  Although glass can be cooled more quickly below the strain point, care must be taken that the temperature differentials within the glass are not so great as to cause breaks due to uneven contraction.

 Annealing cool factors for flat pieces are about three times that for cylinders and five times that for spheres (p.26). Or the other way around – spheres can be annealed in one fifth the time, and cylinders in one third of the time as flat glass of the same volume.   This indicates how much more difficult it is to anneal in kilnforming than in glass blowing.

 The industrial cooling rate for float glass of 4mm is 6 times the rate for 10mm although only 2.5 times the difference in thickness (p.27). This indicates that the thicker the glass, the slower the rate of cooling should be.  But also, that there is not a linear correlation between cooling rate and thickness.

 Glass with no stress has a uniform refractive index.  Stresses produce differences in the refractive index which are shown up by the use of polarised light filters.


Source: IMI-NFG Course on Processing in Glass, by Mathieu Hubert, PhD. 2015 (available online www.lehigh.edu/imi).

https://www.lehigh.edu/imi/teched/GlassProcess/Lectures/Lecture09_Hubert_Annealing%20and%20Tempering.pdf

Monday, 12 December 2022

Firing Small Pieces

 Do you run small pieces of glass through the whole cycle or just bring it up to your degree posted and cool down?

 

Picture credit: Eva Glass Design

It would appear easy to ignore the need to anneal small pieces.  They can anneal with short heat soaks.  In industry the anneal of sheet glass is 15 minutes for 4mm/0.019” glass.   In kilnforming the 30ºC - 40ºC/54ºF – 72ºF below the annealing point is where annealing is effective.  If you are certain that the natural cooling rate of your kiln is more than 15 minutes for that temperature range, you can simply turn off after top temperature.

However, it is not a good practice unless you intend to confine you kilnforming to small pieces.  All glass needs to be annealed to be sound.  Small pieces may need only 15 minutes and often that can be achieved with the natural cooling rate of your kiln.  But pieces of 6mm/0.25” thick and over 100mm/4” in any direction need to be annealed with longer soaks and slower cools.  This is done with a hold of the amount of time appropriate to your glass and layup.  There is an excellent table from Bullseye that gives the hold times and rates for cooling glass of different calculated thickness. 

Using an annealing soak and a cooling cycle for every firing is a good practice.  This gets you into a habit, so that you do not skimp on the anneal and cool for larger, thicker, or tack fused pieces.  If your kiln cools more slowly than you have scheduled, that's ok.  The kiln does not use any electricity to heat the elements.  No additional electricity cost or wear on the kiln occurs.

Wednesday, 7 December 2022

Fire Polishing of Frit Castings


Image credit: Obsession Glass Studio

 Fire polishing castings is relatively difficult.  Even though people may suggest temperatures for this kind of fire polish for castings from frit:

  • ·        They are relevant to particular kilns. 
  • ·        They are also dependent on the ramp rate. 
  • ·        The presence or absence of a bubble squeeze is important. 
  • ·        The size of the casting is relevant.

 The objective is to get a fire polish without distorting the shape of the piece.  The general procedure is to fire slowly to the softening point. This is to ensure the casting is of similar temperature throughout. The softening point for fusing glass is around 540°C/1000°F. You should soak at that point for a time to ensure the glass is all at that boundary between brittle and plastic.

 You may prefer to use a bubble squeeze soak to achieve the same thing.  This has a slightly higher risk of distorting the piece.  If you do use the bubble squeeze, it should be done at the lower end of the bubble squeeze after a slow rise.  The casting will not be subject to much change at 600°C to 620°C/1110°F to 1150°F, if the soak is short.

 The rates to be used are dependent on the size and thickness of the piece.  Larger and thicker pieces need slower rates than thin ones.  Fire at an initial ramp rate for twice the thickness to be sure of heating thoroughly.

 When the softening point is reached, or the slump soak is complete, proceed at a rapid rate to the tack fusing temperature. To get the result you want you will need to observe.  Peek at frequent intervals. Be prepared to advance to the next segment when the gloss appears on the surface.  Your controller manual will tell you how this is done.