Today’s interactive society is built on a foundation of glass – glass that’s flatter, more pristine, and lighter weight than most people ever thought possible.
One type of advanced glass, Corning® EAGLE XG® Glass, has made possible the proliferation of mobile phones, flat-screen televisions, notebooks and tablets, and other devices with brilliant LCD displays.
The manufacturing process that allows Corning to produce this glass – the fusion draw – is as remarkable as the glass itself. The process is a massive feat of physics, chemistry, and mechanics, with single sheets of thin glass forming in midair.
The idea of the fusion draw was born in the late 1950s. Corning was seeking a way to reliably make large, flat glass sheets in a way that could quickly and efficiently scale up to high-volume production.
Another glassmaking process was being developed by Pilkington Brothers in the United Kingdom. Known as the “float” method, it involved pouring molten glass onto a bath of hot tin. Other common methods required grinding and polishing to produce an optically clear window. This, in turn, required huge finishing plants and many workers.