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BULLETIN OF THE CHINESE CERAMIC SOCIETY ›› 2026, Vol. 45 ›› Issue (3): 862-870.DOI: 10.16552/j.cnki.issn1001-1625.2025.1062

• Glass • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Characterization of Stress Distribution in Sealing Glass via Stress-Sensitive Photoluminescence Spectroscopy

LI Jiahao1(), TIAN Yingliang1,2, ZHAO Zhiyong1,2, ZHANG Yong3, GONG Keqian3, LIU Zheng1,2()   

  1. 1.College of Materials Science and Engineering,Beijing University of Technology,Beijing 100124,China
    2.National Engineering Research Center of FPD Glass Technology,Xianyang 712000,China
    3.Institute of Nuclear and New Energy Technology,Tsinghua University,Beijing 100084,China
  • Received:2025-10-31 Revised:2025-12-01 Online:2026-03-20 Published:2026-04-10
  • Contact: LIU Zheng

Abstract:

To address the challenges of stress detection in opaque sealing glasses and the insufficient resolution of existing methods, this study proposed a non-destructive, high-precision stress characterization method based on stress-sensitive photoluminescence spectroscopy of Cr3+-doped Al2O3 (Cr3+∶Al2O3). By uniformly dispersing synthesized Cr3+∶Al2O3 nanoparticles into the aluminoborosilicate glass, the radial stress distribution in concentric cylindrical seals was quantitatively visualized, and the crack initiation mechanism was analyzed in conjunction with microstructure observation. The results indicate that the Cr3+∶Al2O3 nanoparticles are uniformly dispersed in the glass, demonstrating excellent micro-regional stress sensing capability. In Kovar-pin-seals with matched thermal expansion coefficients, the glass is entirely under compressive stress, forming a reliable compressive sealing structure. Conversely, in copper-pin-seals with mismatched thermal expansion coefficients, the glass matrix is predominantly subjected to tensile stress. Notably, the region of maximum tensile stress (approximately 250 μm from the interface) coincides highly with the actual location of circumferential cracks (approximately 300 μm from the interface). This work confirms that tensile stress concentration is the direct inducement of sealing failure and validates the potential of this spectroscopic method for micro-mechanical behavior analysis and reliability assessment of sealing glasses.

Key words: photoluminescence spectroscopy, Cr-doped alumina, glass-to-metal seal, aluminoborosilicate glass, stress distribution, crack

CLC Number: