New Gorilla Glass helps prevent phone smashes
It has launched its next generation of Gorilla Glass - the material
used in more than 70% of smartphone screens, including on Samsung and
Apple devices.Corning said Gorilla Glass 5 could survive more than 80% of drops from as high as 1.6 metres.Shattered or cracked screens are the number one cause of smartphone repairs and customer complaints globally.The
new glass was tested on rough surfaces - a demo for journalists showed
dummy phones being dropped from a height of 1.6 meters onto a sheet of
sandpaper.Some of the phones tested survived over 20 hard drops
in the lab. Typically, most phone drops are from between waist and
shoulder height.
As well as drops, the company said it was twice at good at resisting
scratches and other damage compared to what's currently on the market.Device manufacturers are expected to unveil products with the new glass within the next few months.
Melting pot
"We've been working with our closest customers for quite some time
now," Corning's vice president and general manager John Bayne told the
BBC."And there's tremendous interest in this product for obvious reasons."However,
he warned that Corning had no control over eventual smartphone designs,
meaning some models could be slightly weaker depending on the
manufacture and design of the device. Corning's statistics were based
instead on controlled lab conditions.
Corning's work in specialist glass dates back to 1879, when it produced the glass used in the iconic Edison lightbulb.By
2016, more than 4.5 billion devices use Gorilla Glass, which is created
using a technique known as fusion forming. It involves placing the raw
materials - sand and "other inorganic material" - into a melting pot.It
is then transferred to an isopipe, essentially a small trough, which is
intentionally overfilled. The melted material spills out over both
sides and combines underneath to form the sheet of glass.This
technique means there is no human contact needed in creating the glass,
eliminating defects and removing the need to treat the glass afterwards.
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