Glass for Windows

Used Glass


A UK company, manufacturing glass since the early nineteenth century, now part of a Japanese multinational, revolutionised glass making for windows. This is a short history of the company, technology, and some of its suppliers.

Glass Technology

We know glass manufacture has been practised for many thousands of years, and there are examples of Roman glass in museums. Glass for windows has also been made over the millennia, by spinning it into a flat disc (crown glass) or unrolling a molten cylinder (broadsheet glass), and cutting it into pieces. Churches show how these techniques have been perfected in stained glass windows, and some old buildings have interesting small panes.

Crown glass was made by blowing a bubble of molten glass, opening the end opposite the blowpipe while it was still molten and spinning it out into a disk. Even though it contained air bubbles, and circular ripples, it was much better than broadsheet glass, but of small size, so windows were all many-paned. The central pane cut from these bullions contained the bulls-eye, the thickened area where the glass was attached to the blowpipe, the rod used to spin it.

The technology of glass making has changed significantly since theses techniques, but the basic principles have not. Soda-lime glass has four basic ingredients: silica from sand, soda ash from plants, mines or the alkali industry, some dolomite and a little limestone from quarries. This is formed into a batch and heated to a thousand degrees or so, and then spun, dragged, rolled or floated to make it flat. Earlier processes then had to grind and polish the glass to remove blemishes, whereas modern processes produce so-called fire-grade transparent glass without this additional work.

There is one other ingredient, and that is recycled glass, known as cullet, which accounts for 15% of the batch. This reduces the amount of energy needed to make the new glass.

The float glass method was invented in the 1950s by Ken Bickerstaff and Sir Alastair Pilkington (who was not related to the Pilkington family, founders of Pilkington Brothers). They both worked for Pilkington in the UK. The float glass process is now used worldwide to manufacture around 85% of all glass-for-windows. Before long all window glass will be made using this technique. In it, liquid glass is floated on a bed of molten tin (which is suitable for the float glass process because it has a high specific gravity, is cohesive, and immiscible into the molten glass), and drawn along at a controlled speed, which defines its thickness, while its top surface is polished by a layer of nitrogen gas. Glass thickness can be selected from a few tenths of a millimetre to 25 millimetres. It is cooled gradually, but not too slowly, to prevent crystallisation, and then cut into the required sizes. Computers linked to lasers, measure, and cut sheets to avoid blemishes. Other processes may also be added to introduce special properties like toughening and laminating. One of the main advantages of the float glass process is the glass emerges as what is known as fire finish, the lustre of new chinaware. The glass may subsequently be shaped after reheating it to 600 degrees C. It then becomes malleable and can be formed into curved shapes using moulds or gravity.

Industrialisation

The Pilkington factory was established in St. Helens in Lancashire, UK, in 1826, 20km from the port of Liverpool, and handy for its main supplies of silica, soda ash, and coal for its furnaces. Good communications via turnpike roads, canals and later, railways, as well as being close to its main suppliers, including the local coalmines, kept costs low, and avoided transport disruption. Initially it used soda ash from Muspratt and Gamble, a local alkali producer.

The main material cost in glass making is soda ash (sodium carbonate, or washing soda, which reduces the melting point of silica from 2300 to around 1500 degrees C). Soda Ash is 60% of the material cost, although only 16% by weight of the total batch. So a low cost, and reliable source of this material was paramount. Initially it was made by burning certain plants, including seaweed (20,000 tonnes of Scottish kelp was collected in the season to manufacture soda ash), or extracted from mines, especially in North America (from where all North American requirements are derived today).

The alkali industry was founded to supply soda ash, firstly, using the Leblanc process (invented by Nicolas Leblanc who committed suicide after the French revolutionary government disclosed his patented process for anyone to use), beginning in the 1820s, followed by the cleaner, and lower cost Solvay process (beginning in the 1870s) using salt as the main ingredient. This was perfected initially in Belgium by Solvay et Cie and licensed to Brunner, Mond in the UK, Deutsche Solvay Werke in Germany, and The Solvay Process Company in the USA. Not only does the industry provide the basic chemical materials required in making glass but also in many other others including soap, paper, and textile manufacturing. The first company to use the Leblanc process was the partnership between two Dubliners, James Muspratt and Josias Gamble, in St. Helens in 1823. The region of Lancashire and Cheshire where the alkali industry was centred was rich, and still is, in salt mines and brine deposits. The other main alkali manufacturers were in Glasgow and on Teeside.

In 1851 the window tax was repealed in the UK, (some say the phrase ‘daylight robbery’ stems from this tax, but it is an obscure conjecture), which led to rapid growth in Pilkington’s output of window glass from 50 tonnes each week to 150 tonnes by 1854. The supply of soda ash became so important to the business in this period that the company decided to build its own factory for its production in nearby Widnes, which at that time was the centre of the Leblanc alkali industry , being closer to the Cheshire salt mines, and connected by rail to the Lancashire coalfields, as well as lying on the north bank of the river Mersey, which subsequently became heavily polluted. It also had a ready supply of labour from Irish immigrants escaping the potato famine. Industrialist John Hutchison, the so-called father of Widnes, moved from St Helens in 1847 to build the first chemical business in the town. This employed many of the chemists and entrepreneurs of the day that went on to set up their own businesses in the chemical industry, one being Henry Deacon who moved from Pilkington’s to set up his own business in Widnes, after a spell with Hutchinson’s. He was also a friend of Michael Faraday. Henry Deacon married Emma Wade, after which the school Wade Deacon was named.

Brunner Mond used the cleaner Solvay process exclusively in the UK. John Brunner (who was a great grandfather to the current Duchess of Kent), and Ludwig Mond from Germany set up this company, which later became one of the core companies that formed ICI. (Imperial Chemical Industries, set up in 1926 by merging four major chemical businesses in the UK. ICI is now part of the Dutch group AkzoNobel). Its major customer for soda, in the form of caustic soda, was Lever Brothers, (merged with Margarine Unie of the Netherlands to create Unilever in 1930), which was the dominant soap manufacturer in the UK after the takeover of its main competitors including Pears, Gossages (of Widnes moved into making soap in 1855, after dabbling with soda ash manufacture, before being bought by Brunner Mond and then Lever Brothers) and Crosfields (of Warrington which began making soap in 1813, and also dabbled in making soda ash. After several changes of ownership, including Brunner Mond, Lever Brothers and ICI, the company is now owned by PQ Corporation).

Globalisation

Chemical and glass-making industries have several things in common. They are process industries, where raw materials are converted into products, either different chemicals or types of glass, in a continuously controlled process, using complex chemical and mechanical engineering involving furnaces, belching chimneys, many pipes, valves and smells that need significant capital investment, and which have a life span of 10 to 15 years.

They are also global industries, and have grown by cross-licensing their technologies and trade secrets, setting up joint ventures, merging, acquiring, and continually reorganising their centres of production, and products, as new processes make existing ones obsolete.

Today, more than 40 manufacturers in 30 countries, with almost 400 float lines in service are using the float glass process. Around 1m tonnes of float glass is made every week.

Glass is relatively heavy (2.6 gm per cubic centimetre, compared with water at 1 gm per cubic centimetre, but lighter than Uranium at 19 gm per cubic centimetre), and transporting it is uneconomic above around 600km by road, making local manufacturing necessary in many markets. Transport by sea does not have the same restrictions.

In 2009 some 53m tonnes of flat glass was manufactured, around 6 billion square metres (1 tonne is equivalent to around 125 square metres), valued at euro 23 billion. Some of this is processed further to create additional qualities, giving a market value of around euro 50 billion. Seventy percent is used for windows in buildings, 20% for internal use, and 10% for vehicles.

Four companies; NSG Group, (the owners of Pilkington since 2006), Saint-Gobain, Asahi and Guardian, produce over 60% of the world’s float glass.

Applications

Self-cleaning glass, in combination with solar radiation ‘control’ coatings, low-emissivity energy-saving glass, laminated safety glass and noise-reduction laminates have been developed for building and automotive use. A new innovation is the use of flat glass in photovoltaic applications to generate electricity from solar energy.

Building regulations changes now demand low-emissivity glass is used in Germany, which has seen the market increase from under 2 million square metres in the 1990s to over 25 million now. This trend is being repeated in the UK, France and other countries, as legislation comes into force, dramatically increasing the demand for this type of coated glass.

A way to reduce air conditioning costs is to use solar radiation control glass. This has a special coating applied to its surface, which reflect up to 75% of the solar heat whilst transmitting the majority of the visible light.

The demand for energy efficiency is also increasing the market for photovoltaic and solar thermal energy panels. Spain has recently introduced building regulations that requires photovoltaic and solar thermal panels be used in new buildings. Many other countries have introduced grants and other incentives to encourage its use. In all of these systems, glass is an integral component.

Over the last 35 years, motorcar glazing has increased by around 50%. Average windshield glazed area has increased by over 60%. New styling requirements for windscreens that extend into the roof, or wrap around into the side of the vehicle, have needed improvements in both gravity sag and press bending technologies used to form flat glass into shapes.

Future Developments

Glass has become an important component in buildings and vehicles, not just for styling and light transmission, but also for energy conservation, privacy, solar power generation and energy use control. It seems that this versatile material, which was invented many thousands of years ago, has many more years ahead of it in serving humanity in many different ways. Will we see intelligent window glass that can allow light through in either or both directions, and do the same for heat energy depending on temperature differences? Will it also, at the same time, be generating electricity from solar energy, as well as being self-cleaning? We shall see.

Addendum

Thinking, (yes, dangerous), about my ancestry. In the town were I was born, there was a large Irish immigrant population. They came over to escape the potato famine in the middle of the 19th century. This coincided with the growth of industrialisation in England. In the north west, where I grew up, there was a huge textile industry, but chemicals for glass and soap manufacture were also important.

So my ancestors, came from Ireland and settled in the most polluted and unsavoury place on earth which is on the river Mersey, not far from Liverpool, and produced, amongst other things, alkali using the Leblanc process . (In 1888 the town was described as “the dirtiest, ugliest and most depressing town in England” and in 1905 as a “poisonous hell-town”).

My maternal grandmother died when she was in her 40s, and I never met her. She was from Yorkshire but married an Irish man, from northern Ireland, called James.

My paternal grandmother died in her 80s and was the love of my life throughout my teens. She cared for me more than my mother…at least, that’s how it seemed. Her name was Ella, and she also married an Irish man. I think that makes me more Irish than English, but it seems to be an accident of history, and unimportant.

About devonseaglass
Interested in the seashore, photography, history, science and technology.

One Response to Glass for Windows

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