Thermal-fluctuation mechanism of long-term corrosion of glass caused by internal stress: processes of depolymerization, impurity migration and fracturing on an atomic scale
Irina F. Kadikova, Tatyana V. Yuryeva, Ekaterina A. Morozova, Irina A., Grigorieva, Ilya B. Afanasyev, Vladimir Y. Karpenko, and Vladimir A. Yuryev

TL;DR
This study investigates long-term glass corrosion caused by internal stress, revealing processes like depolymerization, impurity migration, and fracturing, driven by atomic-scale thermal fluctuations, with implications for understanding material degradation.
Contribution
It introduces a thermal-fluctuation mechanism model to explain stress-induced glass corrosion and long-term degradation processes at the atomic level.
Findings
Corrosion involves depolymerization, impurity migration, and microcrack formation.
Internal stress from manufacturing accelerates corrosion and fracturing.
Heat treatment significantly speeds up the aging process.
Abstract
Long-term corrosion of glass is studied using polarising light microscopy, FTIR and SEM including EDX and elemental mapping. Early 19th century beads made of lead-potassium glass are the object of the study. Non-uniformly distributed internal stresses were introduced into the studied glass during bead manufacturing. Corrosion of 19th century bead glass has been shown to comprise several mutually connected processes developing in parallel and intensifying one another. These processes are the depolymerization of glass, the directed migration of alkali-metal impurities and local glass leaching, and the nucleation of micro discontinuities followed by the formation of micro cracks and their gradual growth. In course of time, their cumulative and apparently synergistic effect results in glass fracturing terminated with bead crumbling into tiny discoloured particles. All these phenomena are…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCultural Heritage Materials Analysis · Building materials and conservation · Surface Roughness and Optical Measurements
