CA2218646C - Blue-green colored glass composition - Google Patents

Blue-green colored glass composition Download PDF

Info

Publication number
CA2218646C
CA2218646C CA002218646A CA2218646A CA2218646C CA 2218646 C CA2218646 C CA 2218646C CA 002218646 A CA002218646 A CA 002218646A CA 2218646 A CA2218646 A CA 2218646A CA 2218646 C CA2218646 C CA 2218646C
Authority
CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
glass
transmittance
visible light
light transmittance
weight percent
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Fee Related
Application number
CA002218646A
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
CA2218646A1 (en
Inventor
Paige L. Higby
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Pilkington North America Inc
Original Assignee
Libbey Owens Ford Co
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from US08/781,428 external-priority patent/US5780372A/en
Application filed by Libbey Owens Ford Co filed Critical Libbey Owens Ford Co
Publication of CA2218646A1 publication Critical patent/CA2218646A1/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of CA2218646C publication Critical patent/CA2218646C/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Fee Related legal-status Critical Current

Links

Landscapes

  • Glass Compositions (AREA)

Abstract

A moderate visible light transmitting soda-lime-silica glass of a blue green tint having, at a nominal 4mm thickness, a visible light transmittance of about 10% to about 70% and a direct solar heat transmittanc e of at least 5% less than the visible light transmittance. The soda-lime-silica glass composition includes the essential ingredients of about 1 to about 3 weight percent Fe2O3, about 0.1 to about 1 weight percent TiO2, and about 0 to 500 ppm Co3O4 with a ferrous iron to tot al iron content of about 10% to about 37% by weight.

Description

TTTLE
BLUE-GREEN COLORED GLASS COMPOSITION
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention This invention relates to a blue-green colored glass that has a moderate visible light transmittance, a reduced solar heat transmittance, and a reduced ultraviolet radiation transmittance. More particularly, this invention relates to a glass Composition that utilizes colorants of iron oxide, titanium dioxide, and optionally cobalt oxide to produce a glass suitable for use in automotive and architectural glazings.
2. Summary of Related Art A glass composition has been developed for use in glazings which has a reduced direct solar heat transmittance (DSHT~ and a reduced ultraviolet radiation transmittance while permitting a desirable visible light transmittance. Although not limited to a particular use, the blue-green colored glass of the present invention exhibits a combination of properties that makes it highly desirable for use as sidelights or privacy glazings in automotive applications. The glass composition of the present invention reduces the problems caused by excessive heating on sunny days and permits a desirable amount of visible light to pass while maintaining a private setting with regards to the interior of the vehicle.
Moreover, the blue-green color of the glass is aesthetically pleasing and m_ v. ..~.~..~s. 3 .,x-~.3.~= ~.~, ~.r"S~~3' lfiv~'~ -. nA.~k?F4~--~: .. - ~-~
'dl.... _ ,~ _ . , desirable for sidelight applications. Additionally, the blue-green glasses of the present invention are for solar control applications in architectural glazings.
The glasses of the present invention have color co-y ordinates, as defined in the CIET;AR Illuminant C system, lying in the ranges a* from -20 to +7, b* from -10 to +20.
The term "blue-green tint" is hereinafter used to describe glasses having such color co-ordinates. The present composition is compatible with conventional flat glass manufacturing methods.
It is generally known to manufacture heat or infrared radiation absorbing soda-lime-silica glass by the incorporation therein of iron. The iron is generally present in the glass as both ferrous oxide (Fe0) and ferric 25 oxide (Fe203?. The balance between ferrous and ferric oxide has a direct and material effect on the color and transmittance properties of the glass. As the ferrous oxide content is increased (as a result of chemically reducing ferric oxide), the infrared absorption increases and the ultraviolet absorption decreases. The shift toward a higher concentration of Fe0 in relation to the Fe203 also causes a change in the color of the glass from a yellow or yellow-green to a darker green, which reduces the visible transmittance of the glass. Therefore, in order to obtain greater infrared absorption in glass without sacrificing visual transmittance, it has been deemed necessary in the prior art to produce glass with a low total iron content which is highly reduced from FeZ03 to FeO. Additionally, high iron glass compositions were generally avoided in float glass processes because of anticipated melting problems with the raw materials caused by the high levels of iron.
It would be advantageous to produce a blue-green glass composition having a high iron content that provides a moderate visible light transmittance without deleteriously affecting the melting of the raw materials in a soda-lime-silica glass batch. The high iron levels and other essential colorants would provide a desirable blue-green glass composition having a moderate visible light transmittance.
It would also be an advantage to provide a blue-green colored glass composition that has a reduced direct solar heat transmittance and a reduced ultraviolet radiation transmittance while permitting a moderate level of visible light transmittance. A glass comprising those specific properties is ideally suited for privacy glazings in automotive applications. The blue-green color and the moderate visible light transmittance are desirable for sidelight applications. Furthermore, the reduced solar transmittance properties would prevent excessive heating on sunny days, and protect the interior plastic and fabric components of the automobile from the degradation caused by ultraviolet radiation.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
According to the present invention, there is provided a moderate visible Light transmitting soda-lime-silica glass of a blue-green tint (as herein defined) having, in a nominal 4mm thickness, a visible light transmission of about 20~ to about 70~, and a direct solar heat transmittance of at least 5~ less than the visible light transmittance. Additionally, the glasses of the present invention have an ultraviolet radiation transmittance of less than 42$1.
The soda-lime-silica glass composition of the present invention is tinted to a blue-green color by the inclusion of the essential ingredients of about 1 to about 3 weight percent Fe203, about 0.1 to about 1 weight percent Ti02, and about 0 to 500 ppm Co304. Additionally, the ferrous iron to total iron content of the composition is about 10$ to about 37$ by weight (i.e., percent of total iron as ferrous iron (Fe0) is between 10$ and 3?$Z).
Amounts of the colorants in the above ranges can produce beneficial effects on color purity, UV absorption, and solar heat transmittance without deleteriously influencing the unique and highly advantageous properties of the novel glass.
It is an objective of the present invention to provide a glass composition that results in a blue-green colored glass having a visible transmittance of about 10$ to about 70$, a direct solar heat transmittance of at Least 5$ below the visible light transmittance, and an ultraviolet radiation transmittance of less than 42$. A glass lRadiation transmittance results are based upon the following wavelength ranges:
Ultraviolet 300-400 nanometers Visible 380-780 nanometers Total Solar 300-2130 nanometers zAs is well known, the iron content in glasses is usually present in both the Fe203 (ferric) and Fe0 (ferrous) forms. As is conventional, the total amount of iron present in a glass is expressed herein as Fe203, regardless of the form actually present.

composition with the noted properties is ideally suited for use as automotive and architectural glazings.

For the purpose of the present specification and ' claims, references to visible light transmittance are to 5 light transmittance (LT) measured using the Illuminant A

standard; UVT or ultraviolet radiation transmittance is an integrated term representing the area under the transmittance versus wavelength curve for wavelengths between 300 and 400 nm integrated at 5nm intervals, using a trapezoidal integration method; and references to direct solar heat transmittance (DSHT) are references to solar heat transmittance integrated over the wavelength range 350 to 2100 nm according to the relative solar spectral distribution Parry Moon for air mass 2.

Unless otherwise noted, the term percent (g) as used herein and in the appended claims, means percent (o) by weight. Percent reduction of total iron was determined by first measuring the radiant transmission of a sample at a wavelength of 1060 nanometers, using a spectrophotometer.

The 1060 nm transmission value was then used to calculate optical density, using the following formula:

Optical density = hoglo To (To~ 100 minus estimated loss T loss from reflection = 92~

T = transmission at 1060 nm).

The optical density was then used to calculate the percent reduction:
(110)x(opticai density) percent reduction = (Glass thickness in mm)x(wt~ total Fe203) DETAINED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
In automotive and architectural glass applications, it is often desirable to maintain a visible light transmittance level, for example between 10~ to about 70~, to allow a moderate amount of visible light to pass while maintaining a degree of privacy for vehicle or building occupants. At the same time, it is advantageous to reduce the solar transmittance and ultraviolet radiation transmittance. The higher the solar transmittance, the higher the heat load will be inside the vehicle or building, and consequently the higher the load will be on air conditioning systems. Ultraviolet radiation is to be filtered out as much as possible in order to avoid, among other things, degradation of plastics or fabrics inside the I5 vehicle or building.
The batch compositions of the present invention, when used to produce glass having a total glass thickness of about 4 mm, can exhibit an Illuminant A visible light transmittance value between about 10~ to about 70~ and a blue-green tint, as defined in the CTET-AR Illuminant C two degree observer system, lying in the ranges a* from -20 to +7, b* from -10 to +20, and having an Z* value greater than 32. Furthermore, the compositions result in a reduced direct solar heat transmittance of at least 5~
below the visible light transmittance, preferably 10~
below, and most preferably 20~ below the visible light transmittance. The glass compositions produced in accordance with the present invention also have reduced ultraviolet radiation transmittance values of less than 42~. Additionally, the glass compositions of the present WO 97/30948 PCT/US97/0279b invention maintain a color purity of less than 22o and a dominant wavelength below 565 nm.

In a preferred embodiment, the glass compositions of Fthe present invention have an Illuminant A visible light transmittance of about 15~ to about 50~. Glass compositions with the noted properties are ideally suited for automotive sidelights or privacy glazings because they permit a moderate degree of visibility by individuals outside the vehicle while still maintaining a desirable level of privacy. Additionally, a glass composition in accordance with the present invention having over 2 weight percent Fe203, over 100 ppm Co309, and 0.1 to 1.0 weight percent can produce a finished glass which exhibits, at a nominal 4mm thickness, an Illuminant A visible light transmittance of between 15-25~ and an ultraviolet radiation transmittance of less than 5~. Such glasses are also desirable for automotive glazings.

The glass compositions of the present invention contain a conventional soda-lime-silica base glass having the essential colorants of 1 to 3 weight percent total iron, expressed as Fez03, about 0.1 to about 1.0 weight percent titanium dioxide, and about 0 to about 500 ppm cobalt oxide. Additionally, the ferrous iron to total iron content of the present composition is about 10~ to about 37~ by weight.

Suitable batch materials for producing glasses according to the present invention, which materials are compounded by conventional glass batch ingredient mixing devices, include sand, limestone, dolomite, soda ash, salt cake or gypsum, iron oxide and carbon. Additionally, conventional sources for the cobalt oxide and titanium dioxide colorants are suitable for use in the present glass composition. In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the use of ilmenite as the source of titanium is particularly advantageous, supplying at least a partial amount of the Fe203 as well as titanium dioxide.
Additionally, in accordance with the present invention the use of wuestite as the source of iron is particularly advantageous, supplying at least a partial amount or preferably all of the Fe203 and substantially eliminating the need for carbon. These batch materials are conveniently melted together in a conventional glass making furnace, to form a blue-green colored infrared energy and ultraviolet radiation absorbing glass composition, which thereafter may be continuously cast onto the molten metal bath in a float glass process. The flat glass thus produced may be formed into architectural glazings, or cut and formed, such as for example by press bending and optionally tempered, to provide automotive glazings.
The composition of soda-lime-silica flat glasses suitable for use in accordance with the present invention typically have the following weight percentage constituents:
Si02 60-80~
Na20 10-2 0 Ca0 5-15 Ba0 0-10 Mg0 0-10 Other minor ingredients, including melting and refining aids such as S03, may also appear in the glass composition. The coloring constituents of the present WO 97130948 r'CTIUS97/02796 invention set forth above are added to this base glass.
The glass is essentially free of colorants other than iron, titanium dioxide, and optionally cobalt oxide. However, trace amounts of other oxides may be present as impurities.
Accordingly, the glass of the present invention may be melted and refined in a conventional tank-type melting furnace and formed into flat glass sheets of varying thicknesses by the float method in which the molten glass is supported on a pool of molten metal, usually tin, as it assumes a ribbon shape and is cooled.
The glass compositions produced in accordance with the present invention are particularly suited for use as automotive and architectural glazings. The compositions provide a desirable blue-green color and moderate visible light transmittance while reducing the solar heat transmittance and the ultraviolet transmittance.
The field of tinted glasses is one in which relatively small changes can produce major changes in tint. Wide ranges disclosed in prior patents can encompass many possibilities, and it is only the teaching of the specific examples that can be relied on as identifying how particular tints associate with particular ranges of solar heat transmittance and ultraviolet radiation absorption.
The following examples in Table I illustrate glass compositions in accordance with the invention that are readily formed into blue-green colored glass articles or glazings. Each example includes a soda-lime-silica base glass composition prepared in accordance with the present invention. The specific colorant compositions are noted for each example. The resulting glass compositions have an Illuminant A visible light transmission of at least 10~ and to no greater than 70~, a direct solar energy transmittance of at least 5% below the visible light transmittance, and an ultraviolet radiation transmittance below 42~_ The examples illustrate but do not limit the invention. In the examples, all parts and percentages are by weight and:
(a) Fe203 and Ti02 are expressed in percent;
(b) total iron is expressed as if all iron present were present as ferric oxide;
(c) Co30q is expressed in parts per million (ppm) ;
(d) the transmittance data in the Table below and throughout are based on a nominal glass thickness of 4mm;
(e) ~ ferrous represents the degree of reduction of total iron.

WO 97/30948 PCTlUS97/02796 TABLE
I

Ex. wt~ wt~ Co304 $Ferrous Visible Light DSHT
No Fez03 Ti02 Trans ( I11A) .

1 1.0 0.5 90 24 50.2 33.4 2 1.3 0.6 108 22 48.9 31.0 3 1.3 0.8 65 17 52.2 34.6 4 1.4 0.5 30 28 49.4 25.1 5 1.4 0.9 20 29 48.2 23.2 6 1.4 0.7 26 27 46.4 22.6 7 1.7 0.4 0 26 50.1 23.7 8 1.6 0.4 0 28 48.8 22.7 9 2.1 0.1 0 13 54.8 30.3 10 2.1 0.5 0 15 52.4 28.0 11 3.0 0.5 0 - 12.8 5.6 12 1.2 0.5 0 17 68.5 41.8 13 2.6 0.5 136 37 18.1 8.6 14 2.5 0.5 134 27 19.4 9.6 15 2.5 0.6 157 27 17.8 8.9 16 2.6 0.5 162 26 15.3 7.5 17 2.5 0.5 I49 30 16.2 7.6 TABLE
I
(Continued) Ex. T~, Z* a* b* Dominant ~ Color No. Wave-length Purity 1 25.0 77.9 -10.6 -4.1 490 9.5 2 23.4 77.1 -11.2 -3.3 491 9.2 3 15.0 78.2 -10.8 4.9 527 3.8 4 16.1 76.9 -14.4 5.3 51? 4.6 5 12.0 75.8 -14.9 10.2 554 13.2 6 11.7 74.7 -14.3 8.0 537 6.7 7 12.2 76.9 -14.5 11.0 551 9.9 8 13.3 76.3 -15.2 9.2 542 7.7 9 9.3 79.4 -12.7 12.9 560 12.7 IO 7.0 77.8 -13.1 16.2 564 18.5 11 5.4 43.0 -20.0 14.7 548 21.2 12 24.7 86.7 -9.1 7.3 552 6.0 13 2.4 51.1 -17.2 2.3 501 10.5 14 2.9 52.7 -16.9 1.5 499 10.7 15 3.1 51.0 -16.8 -1.4 494 14.2 16 2.2 47.8 -17.0 -0.2 496 14.1 17 2.5 48.9 -17.7 0.0 495 16.4

Claims (7)

WHAT IS CLAIMED IS:
1. A blue-green tinted soda-lime-silica glass having a base glass composition comprising on a weight percent basis:
60-80% SiO2, 10-20 % Na2O, 5-15 % CaO, 0-10% MgO, 0-5% Al2O3, 0-5% K2O, 0-10% BaO, and 0-5% B2O3, and colorants consisting essentially of from about 1 to 3 weight percent Fe2O3 (total iron), from about 0.1 to about 1.0 weight percent TiO2, from about 0 to 500 ppm Co3O4, and having a ferrous value of about 10% to about 37%, the tint of said glass being defined in the CIELAB Illuminant C color system, lying in the ranges of a*
from -20 to +7, b* -10 to +20, and having an L* value greater than 32, said glass further having an Illuminant A visible light transmittance of about 10% to about 70%, a direct solar heat transmittance of at least 5% below the visible light transmittance, and a dominant wavelength below 565 nm, at a nominal thickness of about 4 mm.
2. A glass as defined in claim 1, wherein said glass has a direct solar heat transmittance of at least 10% below the visible light transmittance.
3. A glass as defined in claim 1, wherein said glass has a direct solar heat transmittance of at least 20% below the visible light transmittance.
4. A glass as defined in claim 1, wherein said glass has an Illuminant A visible light transmittance of between about 15% to about 50%.
5. A glass as defined in claim 1, wherein said glass has an ultraviolet radiation transmittance of less than 42%.
6. A glass as defined in claim 1, wherein said glass has a color purity of less than 22%.
7. A glass as defined in claim 1, wherein said colorants include greater than 2 weight percent Fe2O3 (total iron) and greater than 100 ppm Co3O4, said glass having an Illuminant A
visible light transmittance of between 15% and 25% and an ultraviolet radiation transmittance of less than 5%.
CA002218646A 1996-02-21 1997-02-21 Blue-green colored glass composition Expired - Fee Related CA2218646C (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (5)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US1198296P 1996-02-21 1996-02-21
US08/781,428 US5780372A (en) 1996-02-21 1997-01-10 Colored glass compositions
US781,428 1997-01-10
US60/011,982 1997-01-10
PCT/US1997/002796 WO1997030948A1 (en) 1996-02-21 1997-02-21 Colored glass compositions

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
CA2218646A1 CA2218646A1 (en) 1997-08-28
CA2218646C true CA2218646C (en) 2006-04-25

Family

ID=36253080

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
CA002218646A Expired - Fee Related CA2218646C (en) 1996-02-21 1997-02-21 Blue-green colored glass composition

Country Status (1)

Country Link
CA (1) CA2218646C (en)

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
CA2218646A1 (en) 1997-08-28

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
EP0821659B1 (en) Colored glass compositions
CA2172133C (en) Glass compositions
US5747398A (en) Neutral colored glass compositions
CA2139334C (en) Neutral, low transmittance glass
US5364820A (en) Neutral gray-colored infrared and ultraviolet radiation absorbing glass
CA2029987C (en) Infrared and ultraviolet radiation absorbing green glass composition
US20050245385A1 (en) Glass composition with low visible and IR transmission
EP0851846A1 (en) Neutral, low transmittance glass
AU744695B2 (en) Blue colored glass composition
US6998362B2 (en) Glass compositions
US6672108B2 (en) Method of making glass with reduced Se burnoff
US6207284B1 (en) Metal nitrides as performance modifiers for glass compositions
CA2218646C (en) Blue-green colored glass composition
US7393802B2 (en) Ultraviolet/infrared absorbent low transmittance glass
JP2001019471A (en) Dark-green glass
JP2001019470A (en) Glass with dark gray color
AU715351B2 (en) Glass compositions
MXPA97008101A (en) Color glass compositions
WO2018117193A1 (en) Ultraviolet light absorbing glass
GB2320022A (en) Green solar control glass
WO1999020578A1 (en) Metal borides as performance modifiers for glass compositions

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
EEER Examination request
MKLA Lapsed