Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

On the applicability of the Weibull distribution to model annealed glass strength and future research needs

Kinsella, David LU and Persson, Kent LU (2016) In Challenging glass conference proceedings.
Abstract
The applicability of the Weibull distribution to model the strength of glass, the existence of a size effect on the strength and the need for a non-destructive testing of the strength are discussed and reviewed. There are a growing number of studies that put into question the applicability of the Weibull distribution to model annealed glass fracture data. A recent study indicates that the breakage stresses are uncorrelated with the surface area, in violation of the size effect which entails the Weibull model. It is shown in this paper, however, that there is a size effect, as evidenced in an objective way by hypothesis testing using the likelihood ratio statistic. In numeric simulations it is shown that, given sample sizes of 30 specimens... (More)
The applicability of the Weibull distribution to model the strength of glass, the existence of a size effect on the strength and the need for a non-destructive testing of the strength are discussed and reviewed. There are a growing number of studies that put into question the applicability of the Weibull distribution to model annealed glass fracture data. A recent study indicates that the breakage stresses are uncorrelated with the surface area, in violation of the size effect which entails the Weibull model. It is shown in this paper, however, that there is a size effect, as evidenced in an objective way by hypothesis testing using the likelihood ratio statistic. In numeric simulations it is shown that, given sample sizes of 30 specimens and the Weibull distribution being assumed, it is necessary to employ specimens which vary in surface area by a factor of about two at least, in order to detect the size effect with a success rate in excess of 0.95. To increase the use of soda-lime-silica glass in load-bearing components, however, there is a need for non-destructive testing methods, such as non-linear ultrasonic techniques. Non-destructive testing could be used not only to single out the weakest glass panes during manufacture, thus decreasing the variation in strength among as-received specimens, but also by other parties in the construction sector, such as in routine inspections on-site. Suitable stochastic models can be used together with such testing methods to develop a non-destructive strength grading of glass products. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
host publication
Challenging Glass Conference 5
series title
Challenging glass conference proceedings.
editor
Belis, Jan ; Bos, Freek and Louter, Christian
publisher
Ghent University
external identifiers
  • scopus:85084015535
ISSN
2589-8019
ISBN
978-90-825-2680-6
DOI
10.7480/cgc.5.2432
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
5cab2d4b-259a-4c7b-aeab-0e21b1c5f1f4
date added to LUP
2019-05-17 23:45:30
date last changed
2022-02-15 19:24:10
@inproceedings{5cab2d4b-259a-4c7b-aeab-0e21b1c5f1f4,
  abstract     = {{The applicability of the Weibull distribution to model the strength of glass, the existence of a size effect on the strength and the need for a non-destructive testing of the strength are discussed and reviewed. There are a growing number of studies that put into question the applicability of the Weibull distribution to model annealed glass fracture data. A recent study indicates that the breakage stresses are uncorrelated with the surface area, in violation of the size effect which entails the Weibull model. It is shown in this paper, however, that there is a size effect, as evidenced in an objective way by hypothesis testing using the likelihood ratio statistic. In numeric simulations it is shown that, given sample sizes of 30 specimens and the Weibull distribution being assumed, it is necessary to employ specimens which vary in surface area by a factor of about two at least, in order to detect the size effect with a success rate in excess of 0.95. To increase the use of soda-lime-silica glass in load-bearing components, however, there is a need for non-destructive testing methods, such as non-linear ultrasonic techniques. Non-destructive testing could be used not only to single out the weakest glass panes during manufacture, thus decreasing the variation in strength among as-received specimens, but also by other parties in the construction sector, such as in routine inspections on-site. Suitable stochastic models can be used together with such testing methods to develop a non-destructive strength grading of glass products.}},
  author       = {{Kinsella, David and Persson, Kent}},
  booktitle    = {{Challenging Glass Conference 5}},
  editor       = {{Belis, Jan and Bos, Freek and Louter, Christian}},
  isbn         = {{978-90-825-2680-6}},
  issn         = {{2589-8019}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Ghent University}},
  series       = {{Challenging glass conference proceedings.}},
  title        = {{On the applicability of the Weibull distribution to model annealed glass strength and future research needs}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.7480/cgc.5.2432}},
  doi          = {{10.7480/cgc.5.2432}},
  year         = {{2016}},
}