Authors: Rena Giesecke & Benjamin Dillenburger
Source: Glass Structures & Engineering, volume 7, (2022) Graphite Mold
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s40940-022-00176-y
The presented research investigates a digital fabrication method for custom glass building elements based on three-dimensionally (3D) printed molds. Custom glass parts with specific geometries usually require several steps of manufacturing, highly specialized craft, or machinery. Computer Numerical Control milled steel molds are only suitable for large lot sizes due to their high cost and limited geometric freedom. Lost-wax casting requires several steps of manufacturing and post-processing. This paper investigates an accessible, low-cost process for shaping glass artifacts using 3D-printed molds to close the gap between mass-produced and custom-crafted glass elements. Previous research has demonstrated the potential of using binder jetting with inorganic binders for glass casting. This paper investigates a range of traditional manufacturing methods besides glass casting that can be combined with 3D-printed molds, including foundry and kiln casting, blow molding, and slumping.
The aim is to extend the manufacturing possibilities and provide a range of approaches for three-dimensional glass. The goal is to simplify the process from design to production of three-dimensional solid, hollow, or doubly curved sheet glass elements with high precision. This paper presents investigations of binder jetting techniques and material considerations, their heat resistance, compatibility with different glass- making processes, and coatings for mold treatment. Furthermore, the precision of the resulting glass parts is evaluated, and design guidelines for glass typologies are defined. Glass bricks or sheets for facades with geometric features enabled by the presented fabrication method could allow for novel optical, structural, or decorative properties in building elements.
Glass played an essential role in the history of culture and architecture and was first discovered by humans in the Bronze Age in the middle of the third millennium BCE in Mesopotamia (Wight 2011). In the Roman period, household objects were made using frit casting, which involved fusing small glass granules under heat inside a mold. Since then, glass molding has played an essential role in glassmaking. In the 1st century BCE, the Phoenicians invented glass blowing to manufacture hollow artifacts such as vessels and bottles. The Romans were the first to use small, partially transparent, cast glass pieces in buildings in 100 CE (McGrath and Frost 1937). From the 18th century, cylinder blown sheet glass or crown glass was used to produce windowpanes. Swiss architect Gustave Falconnier modified the traditional bottle blow molding process by utilizing steel molds to manufacture hollow glass bricks for architectural purposes (Jeandrevin 2018).
In 1887, industrial blow molding enabled the mass production of vessels and household objects. In 1959, the invention of the float glass process enabled the mass production of float glass as a standardized product for construction (Pilkington 1969). Today, mass-produced glass parts are covering a significant market worldwide (Statista 2021), while custom crafted glass is a declining industry (Guardian 2021). Mass-produced molds for glass components are typically made of stainless steel or graphite, whereas for customized glass objects molds are typically either made using sand pressing or plaster-silica molds. The molding method’s choice depends on the required precision, geometric, and production number of parts and the molding material is specific to the glass processing method applied. For the sand pressing method, a wooden pattern is pressed into a sand-clay-bentonite mix before casting for the sand pattern molding process.
For the lost-wax technique, a wax or plastic positive is manually sculpted, or CNC-milled, followed by a plaster-silica mixture cast around the positive (Feinberg 1983). However, the technique is time-consuming and laborious, and the glass surface in contact with the mold results in a rough surface that requires post-processing for a transparent result which is likely to affect the precision of the glass object. While CNC-milled steel molds are highly beneficial for large-scale applications and high-precision elements with high lot sizes (Oikonomopoulou et al. 2018), they are too costly for small production numbers and partially limited in geometric complexity. Although some multi-component steel molds can allow manufacturing complex parts, they cannot produce undercuts in complex parts because the mold could not be removed.
Recent developments employ 3D printing of plastic to produce the positive for the lost-wax technique (Dudly 2019). After melting the plastic, the ceramic mold remains, and glass is cast into the cavity from a container placed above it. This process can result in precise parts but requires several steps and post-processing of the rough glass surface to achieve transparent results. Several mold-free 3D printing methods for glass have been developed in the last years, including micro-scale 3D printing processes such as printing transparent fused silica glass (Kotz et al. 2017). The Mediated Matter Group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has developed an extrusion-based process for printing optically transparent glass objects of up to 25 × 25 × 30 cm dimension within a heated chamber (Klein et al. 2015). However, direct glass 3D printing is limited in scale and geometry and requires highly specialized equipment and expertise.
The Glass and Transparency Group at TU Delft is researching the use of structural and recycled cast glass (Bristogianni et al. 2018) and has presented the first proof of concept for using 3D-printed sand molds as part of a review of different glass molding methods (Oikonomopoulou et al. 2020). The latter research demonstrates the feasibility of using 3D-printed sand molds and inorganic binders for kiln glass casting and the use of coatings to achieve transparent finishing surfaces for kiln-cast glass parts. A Swedish research group has also investigated the use of 3D-printed sand molds for glass casting. In this context, the group has made findings concerning coatings for foundry glass casting (Lundstedt et al. 2022). Furthermore, 3D-printed sand molds have demonstrated their potential for applications in the field of construction for complex structures made of concrete and metal. Examples include 3D-printed sand molds for concrete building elements (Jipa et al. 2017) and for cast metal nodes developed by Arup (Galjaard et al. 2015).
3D-printed molds for concrete have the potential to produce high-resolution complex geometries that cannot be fabricated with direct 3D printing methods and 3D-printed sand molding for cast metal have significant cost advantages over directly 3D-printed parts. In general, 3D-printed sand molds are advantageous for producing complex parts with small lot sizes and high precision requirements. For glass, 3D-printed sand molds have unique potential for producing intricate geometries with undercuts that cannot be produced with multi-component steel mold due to the enclosure of the glass parts or steel mold or in cases where traces of segmentation seams are undesired. In such cases, they can perform as a disposable mold that is removed through breakage. Additionally, 3D-printed sand molds are highly beneficial for single parts, prototypes, or small lot sizes due to the significantly lower cost than steel molds. Compared to other disposable molding techniques such as the lost-wax technique, 3D-printed sand molds have several advantages as being less labor-intensive, highly precise, and without the requirement of post-processing of the glass part.
The objectives of this research are:
This research extends existing research by investigating a wide range of different glassmaking techniques combined with 3D-printed sand molds. The goal is to enhance traditional techniques with the latest AM methods and provide a range of strategies for custom glass parts. More specifically, the research examines whether glass kiln and foundry casting, blow molding, and slumping are compatible with 3DPM to provide an accessible and precise digital fabrication method for custom three-dimensional glass parts. The proposed method reduces manual labor and high cost of crafting methods and overcomes the scale limitations of direct glass 3D printing methods. Furthermore, the paper expands on the related requirements for each of these processes, the precision of the results produced, and presents design guidelines for different typologies. It is crucial to choose the fabrication method for the intended geometric features with the limitations specific to each manufacturing method. Glass casting is suitable for solid freeform objects, blow molding for hollow freeform objects, and slumping for doubly curved sheet glass.
To investigate the compatibility of 3D-printed sand molds with different glass processing methods, four different methods, namely foundry, and kiln glass casting, blow molding, and slumping, are tested. Table 1 provides an overview of the investigated glass processing methods, including processing temperatures, mold contact times, glass type, input stage, and the output typology. In the following, the term typology is used for the different types of glass parts such as volumetric solid parts, volumetric hollow parts and doubly curved panes. The main parameters that will be assessed in this research for each of the four glass processing methods related to glass quality and to the fabrication process are:
Table 1 Overview of Three-dimensionally Printed Molds (3DPM) glass manufacturing methods and setups - Full size table
The surface finishing quality is verified based the optical transparency of parts and smoothness of the resulting surface in relation to the different coatings tested. The possibility to reuse the mold is verified based on repetitive use of the mold. The level of precision is inspected using 3D scanning of the molds and glass parts. The geometric limitations are examined through iterative testing and digital comparison using 3D scanning. The cost and time for mold production is inspected based times and costs provided by the service provider and by measuring processing times during experiments.
All experiments are executed with sand molds printed by ExOne using binder jetting and inorganic sodium silicate binder (ExOne 2022). All produced molds are printed as one single piece. Coating materials tested to achieve optically transparent surface properties include water-based and alcohol-based coatings. An overview of the specific coating products used is provided in Sect. 3.2.1 in Table 4. Before executing experiments, molds are dried at 200 °C temperature to avoid failure through humidity captured in the molds. Soda- lime glass is used for all experiments. The kilning experiments are executed in a Nabertherm GF600 glass kiln (Nabertherm 2021). To investigate the precision of molds and glass parts, they are 3D scanned using the GOM ATOS CORE 300 scanner with a scanning precision of 10–20 µm. Prior to scanning,glass samples are sprayed with scanning spray named AESUB blue (3D Ware 2021) to avoid subsurface scattering effects in the scanned data. The data comparison is conducted with GOM Inspect software.
Table 2 provides an overview of all experiments conducted in this research, including the glass processing method and setup used, the mold geometry, glass volume, coating products applied, number of samples tested, and the annealing or kilning schedule. A different processing viscosity and temperature are required for each glass processing method, resulting in different requirements for each molding process.
Table 2 Overview of the experiments conducted in this research - Full size table
This section provides an overview of binder jetting systems currently available on the market and examines their viability for glass casting. They are categorized by binder type, company, casting application, temperature resistance, and emissions under heat (Table 3). Binder jetting of silica sand enables the fabrication of 3D-printed parts with high geometric complexity, high accuracy (Voxeljet 2022). In an automated process, loose silica sand of 130 µm grain size is distributed and locally bound by printing a 2D pattern of binder layer by layer. The advantage of binder jetting methods is that increased geometric complexity does not add additional time to fabricate the mold. The 3D scan of a solid 15 × 15 × 10 cm print (Fig. 1) identifies the high precision of less than 0.25mm deviation from the digital 3D model can be achieved (compare Fig. 8 in Sect. 4.2). The use of organic binders for binder jetting of sand molds is established for the industrial casting of freeform metal parts. However, phenol and furan can emit fumes during casting when organic contents burn (Showman and Scheller 2015).
Thus, organic binders are excluded from the following experiments as they require specialized ventilation systems for kilns and staff protection in the research facility and foundry. Inorganic binder jetting solutions, which are currently new on the market, provide a promising alternative to organic binder jetting systems as they are suitable for high-temperature casting and allow for emission-free casting with no organic content burning during pouring (ExOne 2022). In the case of inorganic binders, the binder structures soften at temperatures between 550 and 700 °C. With furanic binders, softening starts between 550 and 675 °C. With phenolic binders, softening tends to start slightly higher. However, the softening process can be delayed by using special sands, such as Cerabeads.Footnote1 As glass foundry casting requires temperatures of approximately 1200 °C and kiln casting of 900 °C, molds are exposed to significantly higher temperatures. In the realm of inorganic binder jetting systems, water glass, also called sodium silicate, binder, and inorganic cementitious binder, are currently on the market and being tested.
Initial tests of cementitious binder from Concr3de (ConCr3de 2022) result in boiling of the glass during casting for unspecified reasons, while sodium silicate binder resists the casting and annealing process without structural failure of the mold or gas developments. While small print volumes can be printed without any defects, solid volumes of 45 × 45 × 25 cm in size demonstrate stress cracks that result from the hardening process after printing. Voids are integrated into the geometry to mitigate this issue and reduce the print volume. Nevertheless, stress cracks still occur. The racy of ± 0,4 %, and 280 µm standard layer cracking process of larger parts can be successfully delayed by using special sands such as Cerabeads so that 45 × 25 cm parts can be printed successfully.
Table 3 Sand binder jetting systems - Full size table
This section investigates the feasibility of using 3DPM molds for foundry and kiln glass casting.
To produce optically transparent glass casts with smooth surfaces and allow easy mold removal, coating of the mold is required. It is not recommended to post-process the glass for better surface quality as sanding or cutting is highly labor-intensive and can weaken the part structurally. Requirements of coatings for glass casting are:
Table 4 provides an overview of all coatings tested for kiln and foundry glass casting, their indicated temperature resistance, application method, mold and process compatibility, and resulting glass surface properties. Coatings are tested either with kiln or foundry casting, based on their indicated temperature resistance. Initial kiln casting tests without mold coating (Fig. 3a) and with powder-based release agents (Fig. 3b) result in opaque surfaces of glass objects. In the first phase of the coating research, water-based ceramic and concrete coatings are examined for compatibility with the inorganically bound sand mold. However, water-based coatings dissolve the print or cause surface cracking of the mold resulting in marks in the cast glass (Fig. 3c).
In the next step, common off-the-shelf hobbyist coating materials were tested for kiln casting, including powder-based Paragon Glass Separator Dry (Fig. 3b), Bodmer Casting Slip Porcelain C40 (Fig. 3c) Bullseye Shelf Primer and Boron Nitride Aerosol 3M spray (applied as a second layer) (Fig. 3d). The powder- based Paragon Glass Separator Dry release agent resulted in opaque casts with no coating or release agent applied (Fig. 3a). Bullseye Shelf Primer leaves opaque stains on the surface of the glass (Fig. 3d). Due to the lack of transparency in initial results, sodium silicate coating and non-aqueous alcohol-based high-temperature coatings Zirkofluid®6672 and Zirkofluid®1219 are tested for kiln casting (Fig. 3f) and for foundry casting (Fig. 3g). In contrast to aqueous coatings, alcohol-based coatings have the advantage of not dissolving the sodium silicate binder.
Zirkofluid®6672 and Zirkofluid®1219, as well as the sodium silicate solution, are applied in an immersion coating process (Fig. 2) to achieve a coating result with even thickness. Sodium silicate coating results in optically transparent, precise glass parts, but the grainy surface of the sand mold is transferred to the cast (Fig. 3e). Zirkofluid®6672 and Zirkofluid®1219 result in optically transparent glass with smooth surface properties, for kiln casting at 900 °C (Fig. 3d). Foundry casting with Zirkofluid® coating results in transparent, however slightly milky surface properties (Fig. 3g). Before application, the coating is diluted with 25 percent Isopropanol to provide a suitable viscosity for the immersion coating process. The process consists of pouring the coating into the mold and removing it after 13 seconds to achieve a target thickness of approximately 50µm. The resulting wet thickness of the coating is measured using a thickness gauge and can be adjusted as desired. The alcohol content must evaporate or be burned before initiating the casting process. After various tests, it is found that this coating thickness results in the best surface finish of the glass while still preserving the geometric properties of the mold.
Table 4 Mold coatings tested: Resulting specimens in Fig. 3 - Full size table
To address the issue of the milky surface of foundry cast glass parts, an additional layer of graphite-water dispersion named Bonderite® LGP (Silitech 2022) is tested and sprayed on top of the Zirkofluid® coating resulting in smooth, optically transparent glass parts (Figs. 3h and 5e, d). Graphite lubricants are commonly used for foundry casting of metal at high temperatures and are advantageous because they have excellent separating properties (Fuchs 2022). According to the producer, it was investigated with thermogravimetric analysis that Bonderite® graphite lubricant used starts to burn away at around 600 °C.Footnote2 Although the casting temperature is significantly higher at 1200 °C, surface properties of the cast part are entirely optically transparent (Fig. 4). It can be assumed that the temperature at the contact surface of the mold is significantly lower than the casting temperature and stays below the 600 °C temperature limit of the product. Additional factors that impact the performance of the graphite spray are the cooling speed of the glass during casting, the oxygen feed from the surrounding environment and the removal of the CO2 through the openings and pores of the mold. Further investigations of these parameters are required.
For the foundry glass casting process, also called hot-pouring, molten glass is poured into the mold by the artisan using a casting ladle. Figure 4 shows the resulting transparent kiln cast glass part removed from the 3D-printed mold after annealing. The casting temperatures vary between 1100 and 1400 °C for soda-lime glass depending on the viscosity required for the glass to flow and fill the mold. Before casting, the mold should be thoroughly dried with no humidity enclosed in the pores as humidity can cause air bubbles during the casting process and in the cast glass. The glass is analysis that Bonderite® graphite lubricant used then cast into the mold using a ladle (Table 1A). After the glass is cast into the mold, it is placed in the kiln for the annealing process required to release internal stresses from the glass (Fig. 5b).
The annealing times can vary significantly from several hours for small parts up to a year for large parts, depending on the glass volume and geometry (Oikonomopoulou et al. 2018). Table 5 (annealing schedule A), shows the specific annealing schedule applied for foundry casting. Zirkofluid®6672, Zirkofluid®1219, and sodium silicate coating do not cause emissions or fumes in the foundry casting process. Molds coated with sodium silicate result in optically transparent results with a grainy surface structure from the sand (Fig. 3f). Molds coated with Zirkofluid®6672 and Zirkofluid®1219 produce transparent but milky surface properties (Fig. 3g). Figure 5c shows the result of an uncoated mold (left) and a Zirkofluid coated mold (right).
Table 5 Annealing and kilning schedules - Full size table
To improve the surface property of the glass further, an additional coating with Bonderite® L-GP graphite-water dispersion is applied (Fig. 5d) and produces fully transparent, smooth surface properties (Fig. 5e).
For the glass casting process in the kiln, glass nuggets are placed inside a ceramic container and melted into a mold placed below at 900 °C peak temperature (Fig. 5c). Table 5 (annealing schedule B), shows the specific annealing schedule applied for foundry casting. If no coating is applied to the sand mold, the sand grains are attached to the surface of the glass cast (Fig. 3a). Paragon Glass Separator also produces opaque surface properties (Fig. 3b), and Bodmer Slip Casting Porcelain results in cracks in the mold due to shrinkage of the material, which leave traces in the mold (Fig. 3c). Zirkofluid®6672, Zirkofluid®1219 are suitable coatings for the kiln casting process and result in transparent, however slightly milky, surface properties (Fig. 3d).
For the glass blowing process, the artisan takes a batch of molten glass from the foundry furnace, shapes it into a glass sphere, and inflates it by blowing air through a pipe into the glass batch (Fig. 6a). The inflated glass balloon is placed within the mold and further inflated until it touches the walls of the mold (Fig. 6b). The blown glass can be immediately removed and placed in the kiln for the annealing process for geometries without undercuts. Traditionally wooden molds are used for geometries with under- cuts, but 3D-printed sand molds are also suitable as they can endure the annealing process in the kiln. Table 5 (annealing schedule A), shows the specific annealing schedule applied for blown glass parts in the foundry. Depending on the volume of the glass part, the wall thickness can vary between 3 and 20mm with slightly increased wall thicknesses in the corners.
3DPM blown glass has optically transparent properties and is an efficient technique for the creation of hollow and lightweight glass parts (Fig. 6c). For optically transparent results, no coating is required. This is most likely related to less than one minute’s short contact time with the mold. Minor traces of sand grains can occur on the mold-contact side of the glass at higher temperatures. However, in cases where perfect smoothness is required, minor traces can be eliminated using Zirkofluid® coating. The blow molding tests presented in this paper were executed without coating, but further tests have experimentally proven the suitability of Zirkofluid® coating for blow molding.
The slumping process enables the shaping of a flat float glass pane into a doubly curved glass surface. A flat glass sheet is placed on top of the mold in the kiln (Fig. 7a) and formed with gravity onto the 3D-printed sand mold. Figure 7c shows the resulting curvature in 30x48cm sized glass panes and 7b the double curvature from close. In this research, two different peak temperatures are tested to assess the limitations of slumped doubly curved float glass. Table 5 shows the two annealing schedules applied for slumping at 675 °C (annealing schedule C) and at 800 °C (annealing schedule D). For optically transparent results, no coating is required for this process because the slumped glass is processed under comparatively low temperatures of 675–800 °C with lower glass viscosity than in the casting process. Thus, the sand does not fuse with the glass pane. Minor textures resulting from the grainy sand can potentially occur on the mold-contact side of the glass pane at higher temperatures.
However, if such minor traces are undesired and perfect smoothness is required, they could be fully eliminated by using Zirkofluid® coating. The slumping tests presented in this paper were executed without coating, but further tests have experimentally proven the suitability of Zirkofluid® coating for slumping. Mold geometries with different curvature intensities were tested to investigate the geometric limitations of doubly curved glass. Results and process parameters will be further examined in Sect. 4.3. As mold reuse is desirable, the stability of the mold over several repetitions was tested. While molds remain fully stable in the first iteration of the process, they demonstrate cracks and breakage on the tips of the geometry in the second and broken corners in the third iteration of the process. The breakage is primarily caused by mechanical force applied to the mold and the softening of the binder.
This paragraph summarizes the main aspects to consider when designing 3DP molds for glass manufacturing. The method should be chosen in relation to the desired design features and typology. Glass casting is suitable for solid objects, blow molding for hollow objects, and slumping for doubly curved sheet glass. Table 6 provides an overview of the typologies that can be produced with the presented methods as well as information on the design aspects to consider in terms of size limitations, geometric limitations, and mold geometry and dimensions. The limitations and dimensions are recommendations derived from practical experience and system-related constraints rather than strategic experimental testing. Solid free-form glass parts produced with 3DPM glass casting are limited to the kiln size where the glass can be placed for the annealing process. Increasing volume can increase annealing times significantly for solid cast glass parts. Wall thick- nesses of the mold need to be defined in relation to the specific hydrostatic pressure in the mold.
Molds below 15 × 15 × 10 cm size with 20 mm thickness remained stable during experiments, while molds above 25 × 25 × 25 cm size broke and had to be cast with a metal support box. For glass casting of complex molds, a targeted viscosity calibration is required. Further work could investigate the specific criteria through experiments. For the production of hollow freeform parts with 3DPM glass blowing, the part size is limited to the bubble size the artisan or machine can produce. A top inlet is required to allow for the glass bubble to enter. Narrow gaps or pointy geometries are challenging to produce, while surface continuity is advantageous for glass blowing. Single reuse for glass parts that are not enclosed was successful in experiments; however, segmentation is required for mold removal. The size is also limited to the kiln size for the production of doubly curved glass parts using 3DPM slumping. It is recommended by the printing company that segments should not exceed 45 × 45 × 25 cm as stress cracks occurred during tests, and parts might break during removal from the print box. In the slumping process, undercuts cannot be produced, and narrow cur-vatures are feasible. The specific limitations for double curvatures are investigated in Sect. 4.3.
Table 6 3DPM Glass typologies - Full size table
This section examines the precision of the mold and cast, blown and slumped glass elements com- pared to the digital input model.
Mold precision For identifying the precision of the printed molds along different stages of the manufacturing process, molds were 3D scanned using the GOM ATOS CORE 300 scanner prior to coating (Fig. 8a), after coating (Fig. 8b), and after kilning (Fig. 8c). Figure 8 shows the deviations from the digital model along the process. The 3D-printed sand mold is exact with deviations of < 0.25 mm from the digital model. After the thin coating of 50µm is applied, the geometry deviates less than 0.25 mm from the digital model. After kilning, the mold shows some deformations along the sharp edges and outer surfaces of < 0.75 mm deviation.
Kiln and foundry casting Scans of the parts demonstrate that kiln and foundry cast glass can be fabricated with high precision with less than 1mm deviation in the surface area (Fig. 9a and b). However, the foundry cast glass demonstrates more substantial deviations of < 5mm along fragile edges (Fig. 9a). Kiln-cast glass results in higher precision with < 1.5 mm deviation along the entire part (Fig. 9b).
Blow molding Blow molding achieves high precision of < 1 mm in areas where the glass can immediately touch the mold when inflated. However, gaps or notches do not allow the blown glass to fully enter, resulting in deviations of up to 5mm from the 3D model (Fig. 9c).
Slumping The precision of results created using the slumping process is highly dependent on the heat curve and intensity of curvature. Scans identify high precision on tipping points of the geometry and maximum deviations of 9mm in the valleys (Fig. 10). For peak temperatures of 675 °C (kilning schedule C), deviations of 6mm were measured in the valleys of the mold. For peak temperatures of 800 °C (kilning schedule D), deviations of 9mm were measured in the valleys of the mold. Maximum deviations were observed at the edges of the mold as the glass was pulled away from the edges into the valleys of the geometry at 800 °C peak temperature. The control of the edges poses a challenge specific to glass slumping. The glass thickness was significantly varying in the case of the 800 °C kilning curves, which resulted in fragile stretched glass at the tips of the geometry, while the 675 °C tests did not vary significantly in thickness.
Beyond the overview of typology-specific geometric freedom and limitations, this section investigates slumped glass’s geometric freedom and limitations through experiments. To our knowledge, there is no standardized method for determining geometric freedom. Due to the lack of methods in place, this section focuses on examining the geo-metric limitations of slumped glass as which can be examined in a relevant manner through varying curvature intensities. For glass casting and blowing, the requirements are more complex and the scope of such investigations would require a separate publication. Therefore, the following factors were examined as these enable a good comparability and assessment for slumped glass that is relevant to practice.
For the examination of curvature limitations of sheet glass slumping, three molds with double curvature with varying wavelengths (Fig. 11) are computationally designed and tested along two different heat curves with 675 °C (Kilning schedule C) and 800 °C peak temperature (Kilning schedule D). While the wider curvature (Fig. 11a, c) can be achieved with both heat curves, steeper curvature (Fig. 11b, d) can only be achieved with higher slumping temperature. For the steeper curvature the glass pane remains almost flat at 675 °C despite a slight deformation (Fig. 11b). For testing the geometric freedom and limitations of the cast and blown glass experimentally, a range of tests would be required that exceed the framework of this overview paper. Developing a set of standardized tests that can address the complexity of the geometric limitations of glass casting could enable parameter-based engineering of the mold independent of practitioners’ experience.
In the glass shaping process, specific complications can occur for each method that can lead to defects in the glass artifact, such as:
4.5 Cost and time for mold production
3D-printed sand molds offer a significant economic time and cost advantage over CNC-milled steel molds for small lot sizes and other disposable molding techniques such as the lost-wax technique. This section summarizes the costs and time for producing the molds used in this research. The cost for 3D-printed sand mold as an industrial service is approximately 5 Euros/literFootnote3 with no further cost for the processing of the mold itself. The cost is calculated based on print space volume required, not on the volume of bound sand. Specifically, this results in costs of approximately 12 Euros for the 15 × 15 × 10 cm (2.25 liters) molds with a convex curvature, 1.50 Euros for the small 7 × 7 × 6 cm (0.3 liters) molds for 50mm glass spheres, and approximately 72 Euros for the doubly curved molds 30 × 48 × 10 cm (14.4 liters) mold.
The inorganic binder jetting process takes nine hours per print box of 180 × 100 × 40 cm (720 liters) volume with one additional hour of hardening the coating of 2m2 mold surface assuming 50µm coating thickness when diluted with ethanol. The time required for the immersion coating process is short, but a drying process of approximately two days has to be considered during which the coating can dry, and alcohol can evaporate. In conclusion, 3D-printed sand molds offer a low-cost and time-saving molding approach for glass.
This section presents the conclusions of this research. Table 7 provides an overview of the results per manufacturing method.
Table 7 Overview of results per manufacturing method - Full size table
The general conclusions of the presented research are:
The glass quality-related conclusions of the presented research are:
The fabrication process-related conclusions of the presented research are:
Digital Glass: The direct Additive Manufacturing (AM) of materials has made significant progress in the last years, especially for pastes and cementitious materials. However, digital fabrication methods for the glass are still in their infancy due to the difficulty of processing the material [Giesecke et al. 2022]. This paper provides an indirect application of AM for glass compatible with traditional artisanship to open up new possibilities for the manufacture of digitally crafted glass.
Novel design space for glass and possible applications: The presented methods open up new possibilities for glass manufacturing at various scales and applications. These new opportunities are available for glassmakers, designers, architects, and engineers to prototype high-end custom glass parts with novel geometric and optical properties. Areas of application for three-dimensional shaped glass parts could include design pieces, bricks and window panes, and facade elements.
Future work: Future research could investigate the geometric and scale limitations of the presented techniques. This could potentially include the investigation of the geometric limitations for glass casting and blow molding. For deriving a general set of rules for all methods presented in this research, a range of tests is required to address its complexity and ensure comparability with other methods. Strategic tests related to the hydrostatic pressure in molds and their stability during casting to derive wall thicknesses could enable the evidence-based engineering of molds. Furthermore, future work could investigate multi-component molds, the fabrication of building components for assembly at a large scale and their structural performance. These steps could enable new geometric, structural, and decorative features in glass architecture.
The authors thank Andreas Müller and Leonard Stöckle from ExOne Germany, Holger Barth, David Hein, Julian Bernhardt, and Dr. Christian Lustig from the Hüttenes-Albertus Group for their technical support, Eduardo Arabiano, and Robert Niederer from the Glass Foundry Hergiswil for supporting this research. The authors acknowledge the support of Andreas Reusser, Heinz Richner, and Lex Reiter from the chair of Physical Chemistry of Building Materials, Dr. Falk Wittel from the chair of Computational Physics for Engineering Materials, and Robert Presl from the Institute of Geodesy and Photogrammetry at ETH Zurich.
Open access funding provided by Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich.
Architecture, Digital Building Technologies, ETH Zurich, Stefano-Franscini-Platz, CH-8093, Zurich, Switzerland - Rena Giesecke & Benjamin Dillenburger
Artificial Graphite Log in or register to post comments