Glass code explained

A glass code is a method of classifying glasses for optical use, such as the manufacture of lenses and prisms. There are many different types of glass with different compositions and optical properties, and a glass code is used to distinguish between them.

There are several different glass classification schemes in use, most based on the catalogue systems used by glass manufacturers such as Pilkington and Schott Glass. These tend to be based on the material composition, for example BK7 is the Schott Glass classification of a common borosilicate crown glass.

Technical definition

The international glass code is based on U.S. military standard MIL-G-174, and is a six-digit number specifying the glass according to its refractive index at the Fraunhofer d- (or D3-) line, 589.3 nm, and its Abbe number also taken at that line. The resulting glass code is the value of rounded to three digits, followed by rounded to three digits, with all decimal points ignored. For example, BK7 has and giving a six-digit glass code of 517642.[1]

Consequently, a linear approximation for the refractive index dispersion close that wavelength is given by:

n(λ)=

1-nd
170.2Vd

(λ-589.3)+nd,

where

λ

is the wavelength in nanometers.

The following table shows some example glasses and their glass code. Note that the glass properties can vary slightly between different manufacturer types.[2]

GlassGlass
code
Manufacturer name
Schott Pilkington Hoya Ohara
1.5168 64.17517642 BK7 BSC517642 BSC7 S-BSL7
1.5688 56.05569561 BaK4 MBC569561 BaC4 S-BAL14
1.6204 60.32620603 SK16 DBC620603 BaCD16 S-BSM16
1.7439 44.85744448 LaF2 LAF744447 LaF2 S-LAM2
1.7847 25.76785258 SF11 DEDF785258 FD11 S-TIH11

Notes and References

  1. Web site: How the generic optical glass code works . newportglass.com .
  2. Cross reference . 2010 . OharaCorp.com . 2010-11-30 . 2011-10-08 . https://web.archive.org/web/20111008041651/http://www.oharacorp.com/pdf/cross-ref-2010.pdf . dead .