Heating Elements: Conductive Clarity (July 2008)
by Larry Adams
July 1, 2008
Special glass heats transparently.
Glass is a challenging material for designers to
work with, but for applications with see-through requirements, glass is
typically the material of choice. The challenge of designing with glass can
become more pronounced in situations where the glass must be electrically
heated – resistive heating elements must be applied to, or within, the glass
without significantly interfering with its transparency. Fortunately, a number
of suppliers offer solutions for such cases.
Electrically
heated glass can be used in several ways. In the food service industry, the
material is used for transparent food displays that keep food hot and still
visible without drying it out. A heated glass shelf can keep food items warm
while providing the ability to see the food items on the shelf
below.
At the supermarket, heated glass provides just
enough heat to eliminate condensation and fogging and allow consumers to view
the chilled and frozen goods in refrigerated display cases.
 |
|
A towel warmer from Thermique Technologies features glass
coated with metal oxide that will heat the glass up to 150 DegF. Thermique is a
subsidiary of Engineered Glass Products.
|
|
Heated glass radiators and towel warmers can keep rooms cozy
and towels toasty, while heated mirrors in a steamy bath can remove or
eliminate condensation. Heated glass can also be used to
improve visibility and operation of liquid crystal displays (LCDs) in certain
applications. When used for heating LCDs, the heated glass keeps the displays
at a functioning temperature in cold environments. Gas pump displays, kiosk displays,
and some portable electronic device displays used outdoors rely on LCD heaters
to maintain their legibility. Other outdoor applications
include security and traffic cameras, where the heaters prevent lens fogging. Display
cases, towel warmers, and LCDs are just some of the better-known uses for
electrically heated glass. Other applications are less traditional. One
company, Chicago-based Engineered Glass Products (EGP) is looking at supplying
zoos with display cases that will allow visitors to look at their favorite
reptiles while keeping the case at the appropriate temperature for the
cold-blooded creatures. Another company, Anthony International of Sylmar,
Calif., created the display case that enclosed the 5,300-year-old prehistoric man
found frozen in the Italian Alps in 1991. When the body went on display, a
freezer case was needed to preserve the body, and the glass had to be clear so
the body could be seen. While heated glass has many
applications, it does have its limitations. One concept that has been put
dreamed up is a glass toaster, which isn't actually feasible. To toast bread, a
toaster chars the carbon in the bread, and it takes a high blackbody
temperature to do that. To perform this
task, a toaster, with its glowing red wires consuming about 750 to 800 W, gets
hotter, and hotter faster, than glass can get, says George Usinowicz, an
application expert for Thermique Technologies, a subsidiary of EGP. Thermique
Technologies recently released a new, freestanding glass towel warmer.
|
|
|
Fig. 1. Infrared
analysis from Engineered Glass Products compares the uniform heat distribution
across the surface of the glass (top), as compared to a traditional heating
element (bottom).
|
|
The limitations on heat output limits the range of
applications for heated glass, but use of the material is growing nonetheless
in those areas where it is suitable. EGP, one of several companies making
heated glass materials, targets its products for towel warmers, food display
cases and architectural windows. Saint Gobain Glass of Germany makes heated
glass for residential space-heating radiators, towel warmers and other
products. Minco of Minneapolis, makes Thermal-Clear, a heated glass product
used primarily for LCD heaters. Anthony International uses heated glass
primarily for commercial glass refrigerator and freezer doors, as does Schott
Termofrost, Arriva, Sweden. Electrically heated glass
maintains a steady and consistent temperature across the surface of the glass,
especially when compared to traditional heating elements (see Fig. 1.). Heat
radiates off of the glass toward the object to be warmed. The transparent
heated glass has a wide temperature range that it can produce. Some heated
glass manufacturers specify their products to warm to 350 DegF to 400 DegF.
EGP’s heated glass products can reach 350 DegF and can be incorporated into the
smooth surface of a cooktop for use as a burner to boil water and other
stovetop cooking and warming applications. Beyond that, as temperatures near
500 DegF, there can be concerns about glass breakage as well as thermal
expansion issues.
The ability to produce various
temperatures is important as each application has its own temperature
requirements, says Paul Artwohl, vice president of engineering for Anthony
International. A defogging application requires less heat than a food warming
application. Freezer cabinets operate
at temperatures as low as -20 DegF, which can cool the surface temperature of
the inside glass down to below 0 DegF. Condensation on the glass doors will
form when the moisture laden warmer air of the store comes in contact with the
colder glass surface, intersecting at the dew point. The dew point refers to
the temperature at which water vapor in air at a given relative humidity will
condense. For anti-fogging applications, it is only necessary to heat the glass
just enough to keep it above the dew point to prevent condensation, Artwohl
says. Alternatively, the surface can be coated with anti-fog coatings than can
contain combinations of hydroscopic and hydrophilic properties. In
many instances, a closed-loop control system is used to respond to changing
conditions. EGP, Anthony International and others offer electronic controllers
for their products. Schott Termofrost, for instance, offers the Eco-S system
that works with its tin oxide-coated heated glass doors. With these systems,
sensors monitor ambient temperature and humidity and electronically control the
glass temperature to keep it at 1 DegF above dew point. A closed loop control can save energy in two ways. It avoids
heating the glass any more than necessary, and minimizes the heat load that heated
glass can introduce into a refrigerated space, according to Artwohl.
 |
|
Condensation would typically form when these doors are
opened to the warmer store temperature, but these Termofrost doors from Schott
clear the moisture.
|
|
Heated glass not only
works on large-scale applications such as refrigerator and freezer display
cases, but also on smaller applications such as LCD heaters. In LCDs that are
used outside, the need to heat LCDs are critical to the operation of the
device. Typically, LCD’s are rated to 32 DegF, although some higher-priced,
extended range LCDs are rated down to below 0 DegF. With a standard LCD, if the
temperature drops just a couple degrees below freezing, say to 30 DegF, the
liquid crystals can become sluggish and even freeze, says Brian Williams,
Minco’s Global Heaters Product Marketing Manager. By adding 1 W to 2 W per sq.
in., the heaters can keep LCDs operating in temperatures as low as –67
DegF. Of course,
not all devices that are used outside require an LCD heater. Cell phones, for
example, are often used outside in cold weather, but rarely use an LCD heater
because of space and cost issues. Instead, those applications typically use
waste heat generated by the chips on the PCBs to keep the crystals warm and
eliminate condensation. And, LCDs heaters are not just for
use in outside applications. There are indoor applications, including LCDs in use
on industrial freezers and semiconductor applications in which the
manufacturing process itself gets really cold, Williams says. Another
application that he has seen is a ruggedized computer that went into a
petrochemical facility. In this case, the computers needed to be washed down
every night and the heater helped dry the display.
 |
|
Thermal-Clear heaters from Minco deliver uniform watt
density across the entire heater area.
|
|
In all of these applications, suppliers of electrically
heated glass take great pains to make sure that the units are safe. This ranges
from making sure that a towel warmer won’t get hot enough to burn a human hand,
to insulating the coatings or the resistive wires to negate any electrical
shock hazard. When thinking of utilizing heated glass in an
application, it’s important to first understand how it is made. Glass, of
course, is an insulator, so it must be modified with conductive material to
make it a resistive heater. There are a number of different ways to accomplish
this in terms of materials, configuration, and construction. Each of which has their
own set of advantages and disadvantages. There are two
common methods for achieving this: - The
application of fine, resistive wire to the glass.
- The use of metal
oxides, infused into the glass, or applied to the surface as a coating or
film.
A simple version of a resistive wire can be found on
the rear window defroster in automobiles. In fact, electrically heated glass
was first developed in World War II to prevent aircraft windshields from
frosting over and obscuring visibility. Minco takes this wire approach, but
unlike the unsightly wire pattern on the back window of a car, the company uses
very thin diameter wires that are far less conspicuous. The typical wires is
about 0.001 in., but they can be as small as 0.0008 in.
 |
|
The Hatco cabinet keeps food hot with a warming shelf that
allows the food to stay hot while being in full view of customers.
|
|
The wires are placed in a grid-like pattern and can match
the shape of the glass. Typically, Minco tries to create a product that has 50
percent space with wires and 50 percent space with open area. The spacing of
the wires can also be varied to target specific areas of the glass such as
around the edges where mounting brackets are located. These brackets act like a
heat sink, says Williams. By varying the density of the wire pattern across the
plane of the glass, extra heat can be funneled to the edges to make up for this
heat loss, a process that Williams calls profiling. Minco’s heaters can get as
hot as 248 DegF. Williams says that the grid pattern can
also be designed to consider the size of the LCD, where the information will be
displayed and if there might be any cold spots. For instance, in addition to
cold spots from mounting brackets, some electronics might use a cooling fan,
which may cool one section of the LCD but not another section.
The heater wires are encapsulated between two pieces of
transparent material in a laminate “sandwich” construction, which protects them
from damage or abrasion, permitting a rugged application. The time it takes to
reach specified temperatures can be as short as 5 seconds in some applications.
Williams says one of the benefits of a wire element system
as compared to using metal oxide coated glass, is that the wire systems have
better resistance tolerances. The heaters have resistance tolerances that start
at +/- 10 percent, and can be built down to +/- 2 percent. By contrast,
Williams says that heaters that use metal oxide to make the glass conductive
might have resistance tolerances of up to 20 to 25 percent, depending on the
uniformity of the coating on the glass. This is especially important in a
battery-powered operation, he says. With a consistent tolerance, the effect of
the LCD heater on the life of the battery can be estimated with some degree of
accuracy.
 |
|
SGG Thermovit Elegance, Diamant model glass radiator is
transparent.
|
|
A downside of a wire-element based system is that it can
interfere with light transmission and the ability to read the display. Heating
glass with a wire system has a transparency of around 80 percent, while metal
oxide systems can be 90 percent or more transparent. The wires can obscure the
display, especially in LCD units with small pixels, unless they are very
accurately positioned. The other approach, using metal
oxide conductors as a film or coating, typically makes for better visibility.
Light transmission rates stay pretty constant, even when higher temperatures
are required, says Usinowicz. He says it isn’t the amount of coating that
affect heat generation, but the formulation of the coating.
The conductive material used can vary in terms of the type
of metal oxide used, as well as the construction of the glass component. The
two most prevalent transparent conductive oxides used in thin-film coatings are
fluorine-doped tin oxide, and Indium tin oxide. Tin oxide is robust and suited
for a variety of uses, indium tin oxide is a good material to use especially in
the electronic display industry, but is more costly. The metal oxides on the glass can be vapor
deposited, also called sputtering, spray coated, or infused within the glass itself.
Sputtering is a process in which the coating material is bombarded with
negative ions under high-voltage accelerations. The material ejects atoms and
molecules from the target material, which are propelled against the glass
substrate where they bond.
|
|
| An exploded view of where the heater is placed in an LCD.
Photo: Minco.
|
|
Infusing the glass is done with a pyrolitic deposition, a
process used by companies such as Anthony International and EGP. Pyrolytic
coating is a thin-film coating that is applied at high temperatures and sprayed
onto the glass surface during the float glass, or molten, stage of glass
making. This is the most durable way to make a glass conductive and helps
ensure even distribution of the metal oxide throughout the glass material.
Artwohl says that the metal oxide coating can be custom
formulated to get the optimal resistance and emissivity levels desired for the
application. In one formulation, the glass can deliver just enough heat to
prevent condensation. Other applications call for multiple layers of coatings
that can break down the light and block the ultraviolet and infrared rays while
allowing the visible light to pass through. This is important because it is the
UV and IR light that can spoil food, and especially milk and other dairy
products. In terms of tuning the glass to the appropriate
temperature, Usinowicz says that different sheet resistances are used. In a freezer door, it is not uncommon to use
5 W to 8 W per sq. ft. to dissipate condensation. But, he says, in a food
service application where a plate needs to be kept warm and the glass is in
contact with the bottom of a plate, 20 W per sq. ft., might be required. For a towel warmer that reaches 150 to 170
DegF, 30 W per sq. ft. could be needed. Another method of
using metal oxide is through application of the material as a film. One such
company that does that is Saint Gobain Glass in Germany. The company’s
Thermovit heatable laminated glass is a sandwich type construction. It
comprises two or more sheets of glass interlaid with one or more films of
polyvinyl butyral (PVB). It includes two 6 mm leaves of laminated safety glass,
sandwiching a 1 mm layer of PBV in the middle.
A conductive coating is applied to the inside surface of one of the
glass panels. The laminated version is limited to 149 DegF, a non-laminated,
single pane version could be allowed to reach 248 DegF.
 |
|
An LCD heater outfitted with a wire resistive heater from
Minco.
|
|
Whether coating or film, an electrical connection must be
made to the conductive glass. EGP, Anthony International and other companies
that use this technology place buss bars along two opposing edges. These serve
to distribute the electrical current across the film and give consistent
coverage through the glass. The distance between the buss
bars, which is determined by the length of the glass, can create different
amounts of available power requirements, says Usinowicz. For instance, if there
are two pieces of glass, a 12 in. x 36 in. and a 12 in. x 24 in, and they both
use the same coating formulation, the larger glass would require 3 amps, and
deliver 142 W per sq. ft. and reach 192 DegF. The smaller pane with the closer
buss bars requires 4.6 amps, can go to 338 W per square foot, and reach 305
DegF. So the smaller pane can generate more watts per square foot and reach
higher temperatures. Of course, different metal oxide coatings can be selected,
and the same coating wouldn’t necessarily be used on both pieces of glass, says
Usinowicz. The goal is to use the least amount of power, in amps, to get the
required power density, or watts per square foot. Some
systems require transformers to step down the voltage. The transformers are
individually wound and sized according to the specifications for glass
temperature, size and other factors. For instance, the same transformer
couldn’t be used on the 12 in. x 36 in. glass as compared to the 12 in. x 24
in. pane. Other units use line voltage as would be found in
any U.S. home. EGP’s heated glass works with a GFCI outlet using 110 VAC or 240
VAC, says Fred Fowler, president of EGP.
 |
|
Minco Thermal-Clear heaters can be used in both the heads up
display and the display in the portable electronic device.
|
|
While heated glass is already established as a material for
use in many applications, research is continuing. Companies that supply these
materials are looking at different glass formulations, as well as ceramic
materials. Other companies are developing glass doors with coatings that
capture heat from light and do not require a heated system.
The future, however, might be in the form of transparent,
carbon nanotube sheets that are applied to glass. Researchers at the University
of Texas – Dallas and at the Fraunhofer Technologies Institute in Stuttgart,
Germany, are independently working on such technology. The researchers say that
carbon nanotube sheets are more mechanically robust as compared to oxide films
such as indium tin oxide and can offer substantially greater sheet resistance.
Carbon nanotubes have been described as minute bits of
string and trillions of the nanotube strings must be assembled to make a
macroscopic product such as a sheet. Until recently, nanotube sheets were made
in a week-long process akin to paper making, by filtering solutions of
nanotubes and then peeling the nanotubes off the filter once dry. In Dallas,
Prof. Ray Baughman is overseeing the work developing carbon nanotube sheets that
speeds up production to about seven meters per minute. The researchers can now
create forests of nanotubes, which are teased from the forest sidewall onto
adhesive tape and drawn into a continuous sheet. In order to create a denser
material, researchers can place a nanotube sheet onto a substrate such as glass
and immerse in an ethanol solution. The ethanol evaporates when the substrate
is withdrawn from the solution and the result is a sheet with a density of roughly 0.5 g/cm3. The researchers
were able to create a 5-cm, 1-meter long, 50-nm thick, transparent carbon
nanotube sheets.
High transparency was achieved by the densified
nanotube sheets in combination with usable electrical conductive substrates,
according to Baughman. This combination
is needed for such applications as displays, video recorders, solar cells and
solid state lighting. The research obtained a sheet resistivity of 700 ohms per
square in the draw direction and 10 to 20 times higher than that in the
orthogonal direction. At Fraunhofer, Ivica Kolaric,
Department Manager of the Energy Efficient Mechatronic System, is overseeing
the carbon nanotube project. There, carbon nanotubes sheets are spray coated
onto the glass. Researchers in Germany have created carbon nanotube sheets with
a heating power of >2,500 W per square meter. Much of their applications are
in the automotive industry, but other applications might be nearing fruition.
Kolaric says that the key to using carbon nanotubes is in
the dispersion. If the nanotubes are not dispersed well — and nanotubes tend to
clump together — then hot and cold spots can occur. Kolaric says the nanotubes
come in powdered form and are then dispersed in solvent or water. The liquid
material is spray coated onto the glass and as the liquid dries, the nanotubes
form a conducting network inside the lacquer. By passing a current through this
network, the nanotube sheet heats and passes that heat into the glass.
The ability to spray coat the carbon nanotube material is
one way to make the process less expensive to use, and, Kolaric feels, more
attractive to manufacturers. He also says that that carbon nanotube sheets also
use less voltage as compared to a metal oxide coated pane of glass. In a de-icing
application, the metal oxide glass needed about 30 to 40 volts to clear the
ice, while the nanotube unit needed 3 volts. Challenges,
however, still need to be overcome. The wet processes can affect transparency,
creating a haze, but Kolaric feels that these issues are being overcome.
While carbon nanotube technology might represent the
future, electrically heated glass is being sold now. Whether using resistive
wires or metal oxide coatings and films, applications for heated glass are growing.
The versatility of being able to tune the coating formulation, or resistive
wire grid pattern, and reach the temperature, power and size requried, are
making this old material new for use in a growing array of applications. For more information,
email:
Anthony International: susanw@anthonydoors.com
Engineered Glass Products: info@egpglass.com
Minco: Dave.Hans@minco.com
Schott: tim.dye@us.schott.com
Saint Gobain Glass: christian.willers@saint-gobain-glass.com
|