Glass substrates that have enhanced strength and durability are in high demand for use in handheld devices and electronic displays. Currently, glass strengthening is achieved using alkali ion-exchange techniques, where high-temperature molten-salt baths are used to produce a thick surface layer under compression that suppresses crack formation and fracture propagation.

The glass substrates can be used for displays in handheld devices such as smartphones.

While effective, this technique presents high costs and notable limitations for industry: long exchange times in molten alkali salt baths limit surface compression values, the bath-aging effect of molten salts can result in undesirable variations in batch uniformity, and high temperatures increase manufacturing costs. Together, these factors prompt the search for improved glass strengthening techniques.

Researchers have developed a more efficient thermal process for strengthening glass substrates for smartphones, smartwatches, tablets, and other durable, impact-resistant applications. Instead of using pure alkali salts, this approach uses eutectic alkali salt mixtures and employs thick film coating methodology to deposit the needed salt mixtures. Due to lower melting points, the eutectic coating facilitates alkali-ion exchange at lower temperatures, thereby reducing production costs.

Since this method does not reuse the alkali metal coating, it affords improvements in batch uniformity and quality over industry-standard molten-salt bath processes. This technique may also be useful for simultaneously strengthening and curving a glass substrate as well as for strengthening thin or moderate thickness substrates — promising features and characteristics that offer versatility for new and emerging applications.

For more information, contact Sandia National Laboratories, Intellectual Property Office, at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., or visit here .