Difference between revisions of "Safety glass"
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Safety [[glass]] was patented in 1910 by Édouard Bénédictus in France after he accidentally knocked over a glass test tube containing a dried film of [[cellulose nitrate]] film and noticed that the glass fragments remain attached to the plastic rather than scattering. Safety glass is currently made by laminating a sheet of transparent [[polyvinyl butyral]] film between two thin plates of glass. Laminated glass was used during World War I to strengthened the windshields of military vehicles. After the war, safety glass was adapted for use in automobile windshields. Bulletproof glass is usually built up using several layers of glass and plastic components. The term safety glass has also been used for [[tempered%20glass|tempered glass]] and [[wire%20glass|wire glass]]. | Safety [[glass]] was patented in 1910 by Édouard Bénédictus in France after he accidentally knocked over a glass test tube containing a dried film of [[cellulose nitrate]] film and noticed that the glass fragments remain attached to the plastic rather than scattering. Safety glass is currently made by laminating a sheet of transparent [[polyvinyl butyral]] film between two thin plates of glass. Laminated glass was used during World War I to strengthened the windshields of military vehicles. After the war, safety glass was adapted for use in automobile windshields. Bulletproof glass is usually built up using several layers of glass and plastic components. The term safety glass has also been used for [[tempered%20glass|tempered glass]] and [[wire%20glass|wire glass]]. | ||
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+ | For additional information, see: | ||
+ | * Exhibit Guidelines Technical Notes: [https://www.conservation-wiki.com/wiki/Selecting_Exhibit_Case_Glazing Selecting Exhibit Glazing] | ||
+ | * Exhibit Guidelines Technical Notes: [https://www.conservation-wiki.com/wiki/Security_Glazing_for_Exhibit Security Glazing for Exhibit] | ||
== Synonyms and Related Terms == | == Synonyms and Related Terms == |
Revision as of 12:07, 11 November 2024
Description
Safety Glass was patented in 1910 by Édouard Bénédictus in France after he accidentally knocked over a glass test tube containing a dried film of Cellulose nitrate film and noticed that the glass fragments remain attached to the plastic rather than scattering. Safety glass is currently made by laminating a sheet of transparent Polyvinyl butyral film between two thin plates of glass. Laminated glass was used during World War I to strengthened the windshields of military vehicles. After the war, safety glass was adapted for use in automobile windshields. Bulletproof glass is usually built up using several layers of glass and plastic components. The term safety glass has also been used for Tempered glass and Wire glass.
For additional information, see:
- Exhibit Guidelines Technical Notes: Selecting Exhibit Glazing
- Exhibit Guidelines Technical Notes: Security Glazing for Exhibit
Synonyms and Related Terms
vidrio de seguridad (Esp.); verre feuilleté (Fr.); vree de sécurité (Fr.); verre de sureté (Fr.); vetro di sicurezza (It.); vidro de segurança (Port.); laminated glass; shatterproof glass; noshatterable glass; bulletproof glass;