Materials Australia Magazine | September 2020 | Volume 53 | No 3

Page 33

INDUSTRY NEWS

Five Things You May Not Know About Choosing a Batch Glass Melt Furnace Source: Deltech

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Corrosion Resistance Is Essential

The most important characteristic of any batch glass melt furnace is that the lining be able to withstand the highly corrosive fumes frequently generated by glass chemistry at high temperatures. High alumina ceramic for temperatures up to 1800° C and cast zirconia for temperatures above 1800°C are optimal corrosion resistant materials. In addition, the use of a “spill trap”, rather than a flat hearth plate, to catch spills from broken crucibles or “boil-overs” is highly recommended.

How To Facilitate High Temperature Pours

If you are pouring the glass at temperature, then the furnace you select should be designed for optimal ease of loading and removal of the melts, and and for maximum operator safety. Pneumatic door operation permits very rapid access to crucibles.

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Elements Need Protection Too

Some glasses, such as those containing significant amounts of sodium, fluorine, or chlorine, will also attack molydisilicide heating elements. In these cases an element protection liner should be used to separate the elements from the furnace hot zone.

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Does The Furnace Allow You To Easily Fine Your Glasses?

If you are fining the glass with a stirring apparatus or gases bubbled into the melt, the furnace you select should have a top opening to permit the use of a stirring apparatus or gas supply tube. The opening must be designed to resist heat and any corrosive fumes escaping from the furnace chimney. You may also want the manufacturer to supply the stirring mechanism, or make modifications for your equipment.

Experience Counts

Choose a supplier whose glass melt furnaces have been performance proven in the field. Ask your colleagues for recommendations and ask manufacturers for references. Do not settle for an all-purpose off-the-shelf fiber lined furnace, which will require frequent relining. Get a furnace designed to withstand glass attack, and that is also custom designed and sized to fit your need. Also, get a control system that matches the level of sophistication you want. Robotic movement of the melts, and remote operation, monitoring, and data logging of any and all parameters desired, are all available options. Visit our website for examples of custom and standard bench top and small production models. Call us to discuss how our 45 years of experience in customer driven glass furnace design can serve your application requirements.

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SEPTEMBER 2020 | 33


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Materials for Energy and the Environment

31min
pages 52-62

Materials Australia - Short Courses www.materialsaustralia.com.au/training/online-training

3min
pages 63-64

Breaking News

18min
pages 46-51

University Spotlight: University of Adelaide

6min
pages 44-45

AXT and Delmic Install Unique Cathodoluminescence and CLEM Solution at UTS

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page 42

Plasma FIB-SEMs – Advantages and Applications

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page 43

Miscibility Gap Alloys: Commercialising A ‘Missing Link’ For Renewable Energy

5min
pages 40-41

New Desktop SEM Helps Improve Quality Control, Production Efficiency and Material Cleanliness

9min
pages 36-39

Ultrathin Nanosheets Separate Ions from Water

3min
page 35

Innovative New Ship Cladding Creates Jobs and Reduces Emissions

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page 34

Five Things You May Not Know About Choosing a Batch Glass Melt Furnace

2min
page 33

Flexible Phone Screen Chemicals Kick Off New Industry Partnership for South Korea and Australia

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page 28

Look For The Simple Things

2min
pages 31-32

Liquid Metal Synthesis for Better Piezoelectrics: Atomically-Thin Tin-Monosulfide

3min
page 30

Women in the Industry Professor Julie Cairney

5min
pages 26-27

Our Certified Materials Professionals (CMatPs

3min
page 22

Why You Should Become a CMatP

2min
page 23

CMatP Profile: Dr Evelyn Ng

8min
pages 20-21

Reports

4min
page 3

WA Branch Technical Meeting - 13 July 2020

2min
page 16

WA Branch Technical Meeting - 10 August 2020

4min
page 17

Enhancing Protection from COVID-19

4min
page 18

VIC & TAS Branch Technical Meeting

4min
page 19

WA Branch Technical Meeting - 8 June 2020

6min
pages 14-15

Professor Simon Ringer Wins Materials Australia Silver Medal

2min
page 10

MAMAS 2020

2min
pages 12-13
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