Anisotropic double-glass components

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Anisotropic Doubleglass Components

_GTI 1_2021 ALTA.pdf

Anisotropy is due to an in-ternal imbalance of stress inside the body of the glass. Distortion is caused by the physical deformation or lo-cal warpage of the glass.

Laser-guided anisotropic etching for precision

Our discovery of a new phenomenon, where laser-modified regions break the rule of inherently isotropic glass etching and regulate a directional

Quasi-anisotropic wet etching of glass creates inclined

In this paper, we establish a novel quasi-anisotropic wet etching strategy that expands the ability of glass micromachining and enables tunable

Review of Anisotropic 2D Materials: Controlled Growth,

This review systematically summarizes the crystalline structure, growth dynamics, optical anisotropy and their modulation strategies, and the corresponding

Optical Birefringence in Microscopy | Light & Color

This phenomenon is termed " double " or " bi " refraction and is seen to a greater or lesser degree in all anisotropic crystals. Perhaps the most dramatic

ANISOTROPIC | English meaning

Graphite is an anisotropic material. This means that its properties depend on direction. Carbon fibre is anisotropic, meaning it possesses directional stiffness. Electron scattering is anisotropic and the

Products – Managing Anisotropy – AGNORA

AGNORA offers additional insight into the level of anisotropy or "leopard-spotting" in your high-quality architectural glass.

Anisotropy | Definition, Examples, & Facts | Britannica

Anisotropy is most easily observed in single crystals of solid elements or compounds, in which atoms, ions, or molecules are arranged in regular lattices. In contrast, the random distribution of particles in

Isotropic vs Anisotropic

In an anisotropic material, a property varies according to direction. Isotropic and anisotropic are terms that describe whether or not the properties of materials depend on direction.

Anisotropy

Cosmologists use the term anisotropy to describe small temperature fluctuations in the cosmic microwave background radiation. The nature of this radiation supports the Big Bang theory for the

What Is the Anisotropic Effect and Why Does It Matter?

The anisotropic effect describes how a material''s properties change depending on the direction from which they are measured. This directional dependence is a fundamental concept

Technical Document

Glass surfaces directly opposite the nozzles or slots achieve a slightly higher level of surface compression than adjacent areas. This creates a very slight change in density causing the glass to

Laser-guided anisotropic etching for precision machining of micro

Laser-guided anisotropic etching is developed for precision glass micromachining. Steady guided etching ensures LGAE''s robustness and the shape accuracy. High-quality microstructures,

Anisotropy

An anisotropic object or pattern has properties that differ according to direction of measurement. For example, many materials exhibit very different physical or mechanical properties when measured

ANISOTROPIC Definition & Meaning

The meaning of ANISOTROPIC is exhibiting properties with different values when measured in different directions. How to use anisotropic in a sentence.

sedak Dokument

In national and international product standards and regulations for assessing the visual quality of glass, anisotropies are not considered as defects, but as visible effects or characteristics of tempered glass.

Isotropic and Anisotropic

Isotropic materials are direction independent whereas anisotropic materials are direction dependent. The differences between isotropic and anisotropic materials occur due to it''s differences

Isotropic, Orthotropic, and Anisotropic Materials: An Overview

Unlike orthotropic materials, where properties differ along three specific axes, anisotropic materials exhibit variability in any direction. Their mechanical and thermal properties can change

Anisotropy in glass fabrication | Guardian Glass

Navigate our architectural glass range and filter options based on product performance and aesthetics.

Definition of anisotropy

In amorphous materials, such as glass, no long-range order exists; properties are identical in all directions; these are isotropic materials.

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