Pyroceram is the original glass-ceramic material developed and trademarked by Corning Glass in the 1950s.M. Montazerian, S. P. Singh & E. D. Zanotto, "An Analysis of Glass-Ceramic Research and Commercialization," American Ceramic Society Bulletin, Vol. 94, No. 4, pp. 30-35 (2015). Pyroceram is an opaque, white, glass material, commonly used in kitchenware, glass stove tops, wood stove doors, etc.. It has high heat tolerance and low thermal expansion.
A transparent version of Pyroceram, with β-quartz as the crystalline phase, was also described in 1950s patents. By 1963 this variant was also being seriously studied for use in making cookware. It would be extensively explored over the next two decades and result in the creation of Visions cookware, by Corning France, in the late 1970s.
The manufacture of the material involves controlled crystallization. NASA classifies it as a glass-ceramic product.
After about 30 years of informal use as a standard in high-heat (≥1000 °C) applications, Pyroceram 9606 was approved by NIST as a certified reference material for thermal conductivity measurements.
For kitchenware, this ceramic-glass family has been composed approximately, as calculated from precursor glass batches in percent by weight on an oxide basis, of (or similar variations):
Plus additional oxides and colorants depending on the product line being produced.
In 1998, Corning registered Pyroceram as a trademark for clear glass-ceramic window glass for wood-burning stoves. It was also studied as a material for rocket nose cones.
Trademark
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