Use Of Optical Pyrometers For Control O F Optical-Glass Furnaces

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Clarence Fenner
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
11
File Size:
513 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 7, 1919

Abstract

THE manufacture of optical glass is a process that demands careful regulation and control at all stages in order that satisfactory results may be obtained. The product, to serve its purpose, must meet stringent requirements, which can be assured only by careful procedure in manufacture. During the greater part of the time that a pot of glass is in the furnace, temperatures should be kept within certain rather narrow limits; a departure on either side is likely to be detrimental to the glass and may result in total loss. If the temperature during melting and fining be low, the melt is likely not to fine properly and the glass will contain quantities of bubbles, or "seed," or it may become milky and unfit for use; too high a temperature, on the other hand, is severe on the pot and may cause it to leak or cast stones, or the increased solution of pot material in the melt may acid to the color of the glass and decrease its transmission. Moreover, variations in the working temperature will mean variations in the amount of selective volatilization and, consequently, variations in optical properties from pot to pot. Furthermore, in the closing stages of furnace treatment, the melt is cooled until a certain degree of stiffness is attained, when the pot is withdrawn. The quality of the glass-its freedom from striae and bubbles-will depend in large measure on whether the temperature to which cooling has been carried is suitable. For each type of glass there is a narrowly restricted range of temperature to which each pot of the given type should be cooled before withdrawal. A quick and reliable method of measuring temperatures is, therefore, of the first importance. In the optical-glass work conducted by the staff of the Geophysical Laboratory during the period of the war, much attention was given to the clatter of determining what methods would meet the requirements. This article will deal with these investigations and with the application of the results to actual practice at various plants. At the. time that the work of the Geophysical Laboratory was begun at the Bausch & Lomb plant, each melting furnace was equipped with
Citation

APA: Clarence Fenner  (1919)  Use Of Optical Pyrometers For Control O F Optical-Glass Furnaces

MLA: Clarence Fenner Use Of Optical Pyrometers For Control O F Optical-Glass Furnaces. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1919.

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