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Laminated glass

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Laminated glass is a type of safety glass that holds together when shattered. In the event of breaking, it is held in place by an interlayer, typically of polyvinyl butyral (PVB), between its two or more layers of glass. The interlayer keeps the layers of glass bonded even when broken, and its high strength prevents the glass from breaking up into large sharp pieces. This produces a characteristic "spider web" cracking pattern when the impact is not enough to completely pierce the glass.

Automobile windshield with "spider web" cracking typical of laminated safety glass.
Another car windshield with a spiderweb pattern, impacted by a motorcycle taillight on the highway.

Laminated glass is normally used when there is a possibility of human impact or where the glass could fall if shattered. Skylight glazing and automobile windshields typically use laminated glass. In geographical areas requiring hurricane-resistant construction, laminated glass is often used in exterior storefronts, curtain walls and windows. The PVB interlayer also gives the glass a much higher sound insulation rating, due to the damping effect, and also blocks 99% of transmitted UV light.

Contents

[edit] History

Laminated glass was invented in 1903 by the French chemist Edouard Benedictus, inspired by a laboratory accident. A glass flask had become coated with the plastic cellulose nitrate and when dropped shattered but did not break into pieces. Benedictus fabricated a glass-plastic composite to reduce injuries in car accidents. It was not immediately adopted by automobile manufacturers, but laminated glass was widely used in the eyepieces of gas masks during World War I.

By 1939 some 600,000 square feet of "Indestructo" safety glass was being used every year in vehicles produced at the Ford Motor Company works, Dagenham England[1]. "Indestructo" safety glass was manufactured by British Indestructo Glass Ltd, Chase Estate, Park Royal Road, London, NW10[2]. It was a laminated glass used by the Ford Motor Company...

..because it gives the most complete protection. In addition to being splinterproof it is crystal clear and permanently non-discolourable.[3].

That passage hints at some of the technical issues, problems and concerns that stopped laminated glass from being widely used in automobiles immediately it was invented.

Today, laminated glass is produced by bonding two or more layers of ordinary annealed glass together with a plastic interlayer, usually Polyvinyl Butyral (PVB). The PVB is sandwiched by the glass which is passed through rollers to expel any air pockets and form the initial bond then heated to around 70 °C in a pressurized oil bath. The tint at the top of some car windshields is in the PVB.

[edit] Specifications

A typical laminated makeup would be 3 mm glass / 0.38 mm interlayer / 3 mm glass. This gives a final product that would be referred to as 6.38 laminated glass.

Multiple laminates and thicker glass increases the strength. Bulletproof glass is often made of several float glass, toughened glass and Perspex[citation needed] panels, and can be as thick as 100 mm. A similar glass is often used in airliners on the front windows, often three sheets of 6 mm toughened glass with thick PVB between them.

Laminated glass is also sometimes used in glass sculptures.

[edit] Manufacturing processes

There are several laminated glass manufacturing processes:

1) The first method utilizes two or more pieces of glass bonded between one or more pieces of plasticized polyvinyl butyric resin using heat and pressure.

2) The second method uses two or more pieces of glass and polycarbonate, bonded together with aliphatic urethane interlayers under heat and pressure.

3) The third type of laminated glass is interlaid with a cured resin.

Each manufacturing process may include glass lites of equal or unequal thickness.

[edit] Methods of cutting laminated glass

Plastic interlayers in laminated glass make its cutting difficult. There is an unsafe practice of cutting both sides separately, pour a flammable liquid (methylated spirits) into the crack, and igniting it to melt the interlayer to separate the pieces. The following safer methods are recommended. [4]

  • Special purpose laminated cutting tables
  • Vertically-inclined saw frames
  • A blowlamp or hot air blower.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ The Autocar, May 12th 1939, pp53
  2. ^ The Autocar, May 12th 1939, pp53
  3. ^ The Autocar, May 12th 1939, pp53
  4. ^ "Cutting of laminated glass", a UK government glass safety page

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