Journal of the Ceramic Society of Japan
Online ISSN : 1882-1022
Print ISSN : 0914-5400
ISSN-L : 0914-5400
Temperature Dependence of Vickers Hardness for TeO2-Based and Soda-Lime Silicate Glasses
Toshio WATANABEYasuhiko BENINOKozo ISHIZAKITakayuki KOMATSU
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1999 Volume 107 Issue 1252 Pages 1140-1145

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Abstract

The temperature dependence of Vickers hardness (H) of TeO2-Based glasses such as 15Na2O⋅15ZnO⋅70TeO2 as host glasses for rare-earth doped optical amplifier was measured from room temperature to the glass transition region. The following features were found; (1) crack formation under the indenter easily occurs, the Vickers hardness at room temperature being around 3GPa; (2) the temperature coefficient of the hardness, dH/dT, is around -4.5×10-3GPa·K-1; (3) the relative change of hardness with temperature is closely related to thermal expansion coefficient, and hardness sharply decreases in the glass transition region. It was demonstrated that TeO2-Based glasses are fragile even from the point of view of mechanical properties. The reason for poor mechanical performance in TeO2-Based glasses is their weak bond strength and open atomic packing structures. The hardness (H=4.8GPa) of a transparent glass-ceramic (with nanocrystalline particles) of 15K2O⋅15Nb2O5⋅70TeO2 showing second harmonic generation is much larger than that of the precursor glass (H=3.3GPa), meaning that the improvement in the fragile character of TeO2-Based glasses is due to crystallization. A soda-lime silicate glass of 14Na2O⋅13CaO⋅73SiO2 has a value dH/dT=-6.5×10-3GPa·K-1, and in contrast to TeO2-Based glasses, its hardness decrease in the glass transition region is gradual, and a value H≈2GPa is obtained even at the glass transition temperature.

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