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This question has been puzzling me lately.

I'm sure you've seen demonstrations of metal containers imploding when evacuated. Here, for example, are two videos of vacuum collapse: experiment 1, experiment 2.

However, when the same experiment is conducted with a material as fragile as glass, nothing implodes or shatters. Two videos of the same experiment conducted with glass: experiment 3, experiment 4.

Nothing is special about the quality of the glass used in experiments 3 and 4. The glass is also not very thick. Yet, evacuating the glass, almost to 100% vacuum, doesn't so much as put a scratch on it, but the metal containers implode with great force. What is the reason for this difference?

My guesses are:

  1. The total surface area of the glass used in experiments 3 and 4 are much smaller compared to the surface area of the metal in experiments 1 and 2. Greater surface area equates to greater force absorbed by the entire structure, even though the force per unit area remains the same.
  2. Ductile deformation (metal) is fundamentally different from brittle fracture (glass), involving different mechanisms of atomic displacement.

(Blaise Pascal famously conducted several experiments with vacuum in a glass test tube in the 17th century.)

Please share your thoughts on this. Thank you!

Edit: I don't mean to say that glass never implodes/shatters in such experiments, obviously.

  • Related, possible duplicate: https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/195122/could-a-vacuum-airship-be-possible and https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/106295/beryllium-vacuum-sphere-boat-aircraft – Chloe Aug 20 '19 at 20:15
  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat. – tpg2114 Aug 21 '19 at 14:31

6 Answers6

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For a cylindrical pressure vessel loaded in compression (that is, vacuum inside), failure occurs by buckling instability in which a random and small inward perturbation of the stressed wall grows without bound at and beyond a certain critical load value. This is analogous to buckling instability in a thin column loaded in compression.

The characteristic which resists buckling instability is not the yield strength but the stiffness of the wall, which depends on its thickness and on its elastic modulus. The thicker the wall and the higher the modulus, the more resistant to buckling the cylinder will be.

The elastic modulus of common glass is about $48 \times 10^6$ psi compared to that of steel at $29 \times 10^6$ psi. The glass cylinder will hence be more resistant to implosion than a steel cylinder of identical size and wall thickness.

Note also that putting a scratch or microcrack in glass renders it weak in tension. In compression, however, the applied stress tends to press microcracks shut, so scratching a glass vacuum vessel does not cause the sort of catastrophic failure you expect to get when the glass is in tension.

Ruslan
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niels nielsen
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    The elastic modulus of glass at room temperature is around 72 GPa (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_physical_properties_of_glass) while that of steel is 200 GPa (https://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/young-modulus-d_417.html) – Akash Chandra Aug 19 '19 at 08:10
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    I would think the increased resistance of glass vessels to buckling instability failure would be more to do with their relatively larger wall thickness, than elastic modulus. – Time4Tea Aug 20 '19 at 11:39
  • So a scratch on the outside would weaken a cylindrical vessel, but a scratch on the inside would be relatively inconsequential? – Doktor J Aug 20 '19 at 15:00
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    it depends on the relative thickness of the part and its shape. for a sphere, all portions of the wall thickness are under compression so the scratches don't matter, but for more complex shapes this is not guaranteed. In addition, once the collapse instability begins there will be portions of the wall that immediately go into tension and with scratches present, the part can fail explosively. – niels nielsen Aug 20 '19 at 15:48
  • @Time4Tea Clearly the thickness of the walls of the vessel is relevant but so is the material they are made from. A vessel made of play-dough isn't going to resist atmospheric pressure even with much thicker walls than a glass vessel that can. – JimmyJames Aug 20 '19 at 15:59
  • @JimmyJames yes, both are factors in buckling. However, in this case, wall thickness is the key factor, given the elastic moduli quoted are incorrect. – Time4Tea Aug 20 '19 at 17:02
  • @time4tea, those values are straight off the interwebs. and we all know that everything on the interwebs is absolutely TRUE. Correct & edit if you like. – niels nielsen Aug 20 '19 at 17:09
  • @Time4Tea Looking at the second link from the OP's comment above, there's a note on elastic/tensile modulus: "... as long as the stress is less than the yield strength of the material." No yield strength is given for glass in the table however. – JimmyJames Aug 20 '19 at 17:09
  • @JimmyJames glass is a highly brittle material. There will be practically no yielding at all in comparison to steel, before it ruptures (which is why only an ultimate tensile strength is given). If the applied load reaches the point where the glass vessel would buckle, it will just shatter. – Time4Tea Aug 20 '19 at 17:19
  • @Time4Tea I think the real answer is a strong anthropic argument (if you will): Given the way glass fails catastrophically, any useful glass container needs to be strong enough to resist the forces it is likely to encounter in normal use. This threshold exceeds the force of atmospheric pressure. Ductile metal containers can be damaged without failing and therefore there is a lower threshold for same/similar usage. – JimmyJames Aug 20 '19 at 17:20
  • @Time4Tea "practically no yielding": right, I misread the statement to mean something else. – JimmyJames Aug 20 '19 at 17:26
  • @JimmyJames There would likely be some yielding of glass; however, it will be so small as to be negligible. Glass is interesting though. The yielding behavior is largely determined/limited by the presence of microscopic scratches on the surface. Consider, for example, glass fibers (as used in fiber optic cables), which can be bent without fracturing. – Time4Tea Aug 20 '19 at 17:30
  • @JimmyJames I would think any good pressure vessel, regardless of material, needs to be designed to withstand the forces it will encounter during use. We're in danger of getting into a 'discussion' here though, which is not what comments are for. – Time4Tea Aug 20 '19 at 17:32
  • @Time4Tea "I would think any good pressure vessel, regardless of material, needs to be designed to withstand the forces it will encounter during use." Exactly my point. Consider a beer bottle versus a beer can. The can is easily deformed without failing. If I drop a (full) can an inch onto a hard surface, it might be dented but will not fail catastrophically. If I do the same with the bottle, it will probably not be damaged at all. Otherwise bottles would be shattering every time they were clinked together. For the exact same use, the bottle must be able to resist more external force. – JimmyJames Aug 21 '19 at 16:44
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Niels's answer is right at pointing the difference of stiffness as the main reason for the different behaviour of glass and steel. However, there is an additional element at play: relative wall thickness. In the videos, glass containers are a lot smaller than steel ones, but their walls are very thick when compared with their size - if we scaled the tubes in the last video to truck size, we would get a some inches thick wall instead of just a few mm, like the steel container.

Glass is a lot more brittle than metals under tension (as Niels said), a lot cheaper (by mass) and usually lighter. That combine to make usual glass containers a lot ticker than metal containers made for the same purpose. That's the reason we can easily crush an empty beer can with bare hands but crushing an empty beer bottle is a lot harder. The same difference holds if we replace bare hands with external air pressure.

Pere
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    Yet if we drop a beer can and bottle (empty or full), the can sustains relatively little damage, while the bottle shatters. – jamesqf Aug 19 '19 at 16:40
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    Yes, that makes some resistance to impact a quite exigent design requirement for glass bottles but not for cans. Probably, a beer bottle as thin as laboratory glassware or a light bulb might do the work of containing beer but it would be too fragile for normal handling. Increasing thickness makes the bottle resistant enough for normal use but it also unintendedly increases its buckling resistance. However, that's not the only reason to increase glass thickness. – Pere Aug 19 '19 at 18:57
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    @jamesqf : "while the bottle shatters" [citation needed]. I've seen glass bottles bounce (granted, not every time). – Eric Towers Aug 19 '19 at 22:21
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    @EricTowers Whether a glass bottle bounces or breaks very much depends on the exact spot and direction with which it hits the stone floor first. – cmaster - reinstate monica Aug 19 '19 at 22:23
  • @Eric Towers: Sure. Perhaps I should have written "either shatters or bounces, but doesn't deform". Though I've occasionally seen glass objects bounce, and then shatter in mid-air. – jamesqf Aug 20 '19 at 04:40
  • @jamesqf that is largely to do with the fact that most metals are significantly more ductile than glass (i.e. they can deform more and absorb much more energy before they rupture/fail). Because of that, if a glass vessel was to implode under a vacuum, it would not 'crumple up' in the way that a steel vessel would - it would shatter suddenly, due to its brittle nature. – Time4Tea Aug 20 '19 at 11:44
  • Uhhhh.. I almost think this answer needs a disclaimer, "Kids, don't try this at home" (on the crushing beer can vs beer bottle bare-handed bit) – Doktor J Aug 20 '19 at 15:02
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    A glass bottle subjected to a vacuum has force applied relatively evenly across its entire surface, whereas a bottle dropped on the ground has a large amount of force applied to a very small area. As for the bounce and mid-air shatter, I wonder if it's due to increased pressure from the CO2 expelled from the beer which was shaken up during the bounce? (e.g. would it do the same with a non-carbonated liquid, or if the bottle was already open/empty?) – Darrel Hoffman Aug 20 '19 at 17:16
  • @Time4Tea: Yes, that's exactly what I've been trying to say! – jamesqf Aug 21 '19 at 03:28
  • I have dropped so many glass bottles on pavement (accidentally) without shattering them. – industry7 Aug 21 '19 at 18:45
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There are two failure modes that need to be considered for a vacuum tube/vessel:

The first is tensile/compressive failure, caused by the applied stress exceeding the material's ultimate tensile stress. This is largely governed by the wall thickness and ultimate tensile stress. However, note that in a ductile material, this is preceeded by a period of plastic deformation.

The second is buckling (also known as elastic instability failure). In this case, the structure of the vessel becomes unstable to small perturbations, which can cause a failure below the load of the first case. This case is largely governed by wall thickness and elastic modulus.

Vacuum vessels made from either metal or glass can fail by either of the two modes, depending on their design and the relative values of the parameters mentioned.

Another thing to bear in mind though is that most metals are much more ductile than glass, which is very brittle. So, a failure in the two cases will look very different. A metal tube will tend to deform quite a lot before it ruptures and may 'crumple up'. However, glass cannot deform much before it breaks, so if it fails it will tend to shatter very suddenly. This tends to be more dangerous and is probably why many glass vessels have thicker walls than metal ones - because they need a higher factor of safety.

Time4Tea
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    The failure mode of glass pressure vessels is very nasty, which is why safety measures are taken. In the link, you see a xenon arc lamp, which is filled with xenon at an increased pressure. If the lamp explodes, while being handled, small shards of glass may enter the body, or even the blood stream. This is why there are plastic enclosures to protect against this. Such lamps are handled with care and respect. – Dohn Joe Aug 21 '19 at 09:03
  • @DohnJoe good link - thanks for the input. – Time4Tea Aug 21 '19 at 12:43
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"Strong" is a vague and overloaded term.

Does it refer to?

  • tensile strength (resistance to stretching).
  • compressive strength (resistance to squishing)
  • hardness (resistance to cutting)
  • fracture strength (resistance to fracturing).

You then additionally have the difference in failure types:

  • elastic (it stretches but then returns to original)
  • plastic (it starts to deform slowly and then stays deformed)
  • brittle (when it starts to fail it fails immediately).

Glass and steel have very different behavior and failure modes. Drop a metal can and it will dent or deform, glass on the other hand will chip or fracture. This doesn't mean one is stronger or weaker when under load, it just means they have different failure thresholds and behaviors. Metal has reasonably high fracture strength but plastic deformation - it is much easier to dent or bend than shatter. Glass on the other hand will either show no damage at all or be fractured/chipped. You can't usually dent it.

Tim B
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  • I would imagine that it's also somewhat of a coincidence. The containers in question are engineered to withstand high internal pressure, and the relative weakness of glass to steel means the walls need to be thicker. It just so happens (based on the associated resistances to failure modes) that these thicker walls are enough to withstand the low pressure as well. Which is to say, I would imagine that a glass container made to the same specifications as the metal one would likely not survive high or low pressure for very long. – Blackhawk Aug 21 '19 at 22:39
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Expanding on Pere's answer about the relative wall thickness being the criteria for failure.

The document below describes the derivation of the stress profile in a thick walled cylinder (known as Lame's equations)

http://courses.washington.edu/me354a/Thick%20Walled%20Cylinders.pdf

For an external pressure and zero internal pressure, like in your video examples, the stress is largest at the inner surface of the wall

$$\sigma_\theta = \left[ \frac{-2P_o r_o^2}{r_o^2-r_i^2}\right]$$

If we were to only consider pressure vessels of the same wall thickness $r_o = r_i + t$, then the expression for stress is

$$\sigma_\theta = \left[ \frac{-2P_o \left( r_i^2 +2 r_i t + t^2\right)}{2r_i t + t^2}\right]$$

Mathematically, the numerator grows larger than the denominator for large $r_i$ (quadratic vs linear behavior). Physically, that means that the stress is greater for larger containers, like your metal examples. The stress is lower for smaller containers, like your glass examples.

  • Since the failure mechanism is buckling, an instability analysis is what's required to determine failure point, rather than strictly a stress analysis. (Turns out for buckling the failure point scales with the wall to radius ratio cubed) – Rick Aug 23 '19 at 15:27
  • @Rick Yes, agreed. At the time of this answer submission, the question and most upvoted answers were focused on the "contradiction" of a stronger material failing at lower loads, while ignoring the geometry aspect. This answer was just meant to illustrate that geometry was unfavourable in the cases that failed. Like you said, a buckling/instability analysis would be necessary to quantitatively determine the failure point. – Jonathan Chiang Aug 23 '19 at 17:28
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The failure mechanism for a cylindrical container under vacuum is buckling.

If we look at the equation predicting buckling pressure we can figure out which variables are most responsible for the differences you see in the videos:

$$P_b=\frac14 \frac{E}{1-\nu^2}\left(\frac{t}{r}\right)^3$$

Where $P_b$ is buckling pressure, $E$ and $\nu$ are the modulus of elasticity and poisson's ratio of the material, and $t$ and $r$ are the wall thickness and radius of the cylinder. This is neatly split into a material factor and a geometry factor.

For glass: $$\frac{E}{1-\nu^2}=\frac{70 \, \text{GPa}}{1-0.22^2}= 74\text{GPa}$$ And Mild Steel: $$\frac{E}{1-\nu^2}=\frac{200 \, \text{GPa}}{1-0.3^2}= 220\text{GPa}$$

So from this it seems your intuition that steel is the superior material is still definitely true. So what's going on?

It must be the geometry. The glass containers were designed to handle vacuum and their thickness to radius ratio is much better suited for it.

So let's find out approximately how thin that unreinforced tanker wall must have been:

$$ 1\text{ATM}=\frac14\;220 \, \text{GPa}\;\left(\frac{t}{1\,\text{m}}\right)^3$$ $$ t \approx 1 \text{cm}$$

You may be wondering, well why are the steel containers so thin? Wouldn't they rupture under pressure then?

For comparison, let's look at the equation for rupture pressure:

$$P_r=\sigma_y \frac{t}{r}$$

Where $P_r$ is rupture pressure, $\sigma$ is the stress limit of the material, and $t$ and $r$ are still the wall thickness and radius of the cylinder. This is also neatly split into a material factor and a geometry factor.

For Mild Steel: $$\sigma=200 \text{MPa}$$

So that tanker could handle a pressure of:

$$P_r=\sigma_y \frac{t}{r}=200\text{MPa} \frac{1 \text{cm}}{1 \text{m}}= 2\text{Mpa}$$

So it could handle a pressure of roughly 20 atmospheres before rupturing. That's probably way more pressure than it would ever need. So then the wall is actually much thicker than it would really need to be. It's designed that thick so that it won't collapse under its own weight and so it won't buckle (extremely) easily. This brings us to the reinforced tanker. The reason it has support structure in bands around it is to allow the metal to be thinner since it doesn't actually need to be that thick to hold the pressure of the fluid.

Then you might be asking if the wall was so much thinner for the reinforced tanker, why didn't it collapse at a much weaker vacuum? For that we need to examine the buckling pattern. The unreinforced tanker just folded with two portions moving out and two portions moving in. This is the simplest buckling mode and has the lowest pressure threshold. The reinforcements on the other tanker prevented that mode from occurring by providing additional rigidity, so the buckling that occurred followed a much more complex pattern.

Rick
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