Homogenization of glass melts by bubbling on a laboratory scale

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Date
1994
Volume
67
Issue
Journal
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Publisher
Offenbach : Verlag der Deutschen Glastechnischen Gesellschaft
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Abstract

In a typical melter, the molten glass tends to be inhomogeneous due to the heterogeneity of the raw materials. One means of yielding more homogeneous glass is bubbling air through the glass melt through nozzles at the base of the melter. The induced fluid flow dissolves cords and homogenizes the glass melt. This bubbling process was investigated on a laboratory scale both from an experimental and a theoretical point of view. A standard soda-lime-silica glass was bubbled with argon in a platinum crucible at 1400 C. The samples treated were tested with regard to their optical homogeneity, using an improved version of the Christiansen-Shelyubskii method. The corresponding fluid flow phenomena were simulated by a suitable mathematical model. Due to the axial symmetry of the bubbling equipment and the high viscosity of the glass melt (creeping flow), the problem can be reduced to the solution of a differential equation of the fourth order with the stream function as independent variable. The numerical treatment superposes Gegenbauer functions matching the given boundary values for the velocity and tension, respectively. The homogeneity strongly increased with bubbling time and its local variation showed good correlation with the calculated flow pattern in the crucible.

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Högerl, K., & Frischat, G. H. (1994). Homogenization of glass melts by bubbling on a laboratory scale. 67.
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CC BY 3.0 DE