Glass databases explained

Glass databases are a collection of glass compositions, glass properties, glass models, associated trademark names, patents etc. These data were collected from publications in scientific papers and patents, from personal communication with scientists and engineers, and other relevant sources.

History

Since the beginning of scientific glass research in the 19th century, thousands of glass property-composition datasets were published. The first attempt to summarize all those data systematically was the monograph "Glastechnische Tabellen".[1] World War II and the Cold War prevented similar efforts for many years afterwards.

In 1956, "Phase Diagrams for Ceramists" was published the first time, containing a collection of phase diagrams.[2] This database is known today as "Phase Equilibria Diagrams".[3]

in 1983, the "Handbook of Glass Data" was published,[4] followed by the creation of the Japanese database Interglad in 1991.[5] The "Handbook of Glass Data" was later digitalized and substantially expanded under the name SciGlass.[6] Currently, SciGlass contains properties of about 400,000 glass compositions, INTERGLAD about 380,000,[7] and "Phase Equilibria Diagrams" includes about 31,000 diagrams.

in 2019, the SciGlass data was made publicly available on GitHub under the ODC Open Database License (ODbL).

In 2023, the re-emergence of the SciGlass database as SciGlass Sage[8] offered "AI" assistance, a property predictor powered by random forest regression models, and a generator using predictive models in conjunction with genetic algorithms.

In 2024, SciGlass Next was created as an open-access web database utilizing the SciGlass data available on GitHub. The database is hosted in the public domain of Friedrich Schiller University Jena.

SciGlass Next
Type:Scientific database
Commercial:No
Registration:Required with institutional email
Launch Date:2024
Content License:Open Database License
Programming Language:Javascript/Python

The website provides comprehensive documentation, including step-by-step instructions and glossaries of properties and symbols used.

Most features are covered, including:

Glass database contents

The following list of glass database contents is not complete, and it may not be up to date. For full features see the references section below. All databases contain citations to the original data sources and the chemical composition of the glasses or ceramics.

Application

Notes and References

  1. "Glastechnische Tabellen" (engl.: Glass Technical Tables), edited by W. Eitel, M. Pirani, and K. Scheel, Springer Verlag, Berlin, 1932
  2. Levin, E.M., McMurdie, H.F., and Hall, F.P., Phase Diagrams for Ceramists: Volume 1, The American Ceramic Society, Columbus, Ohio, p. 6, 1956.
  3. http://www.ceramics.org/phase/ Phase Equilibria Diagrams Database
  4. "Handbook of Glass Data", edited by O. V. Mazurin, M. V. Streltsina, and T. P. Shvaiko-Shvaikovskaya, Elsevier, 1983
  5. Web site: INTERGLAD . 2007-12-03 . https://web.archive.org/web/20071217102026/http://www.newglass.jp/interglad_6/gaiyo/info_e.html . 2007-12-17 . dead .
  6. http://www.sciglass.info/ SciGlass
  7. Web site: INTERGLAD Ver. 8 . 2024-03-08 . www.newglass.jp.
  8. https://honours-app-56d4c.firebaseapp.com/
  9. Web site: Material Equivalency List | LaCroix Precision Optics.