Jazzy47
Structural
- Feb 22, 2013
- 26
So I had an interesting stained glass design created for a personal project. The end result was a curved piece instead of a flat plane like you'd hang on your window. The stained glass artists cannot cut pieces out of curved glass. Instead they have to cut the colors out of flat glass, heat it until in a kiln it's plastic (but not melted), and let it fall onto a mold of the desired radius. I know intuitively it is more difficult to cut curved glass...if you score it and try to tap it out like a flat piece of glass, it will just break along a stress fracture instead of the nice shape you cut. What is the structural reason for this? How are stresses distributed differently on a curved surface than a flat one for a brittle material? Obviously a flat piece of glass you can lay nicely on a table whereas a curved piece would be unsupported in the center, but I feel there are reasons beyond this. We didn't really analyze stresses of curved objects much in my undergrad.
Thanks!
Thanks!