2.2.1.5 Glass
Glass has been made and used by humans for thousands of years, although the industrial production and use of glass only started in the middle of the 19th century. Glass is a solid, transparent and amorphous material consisting mainly of silicon dioxide. It has many favourable properties that make it significant, such as transparency, many possibilities of shape and colour, resistance to most chemicals, low thermal conductivity and low electrical conductivity. However, glass is also susceptible to impact and is brittle. Soda-lime glass, lead glass and borosilicate glass make up the bulk of today’s glass production. Glass is also divided according to the form of glass, including flat glass (building), hollow glass (bottles, drinking vessels), glass tubes (laboratory equipment), foam glass, glass wool, glass fibres and coloured glass.
Typical Applications | |
Construction | flat glass, glass wool |
Automotive | headlights, windscreens |
Consumer goods | furniture parts, tableware, lighting, cooking utensils |
Medical | laboratory glass |
Packaging | container glass |
Electronics | fibres for printed circuit boards, substrate glass for displays, optical glass fibre |
Fibres | textile glass fibres, reinforcement fibres for plastics |
Miscellaneous | lenses, art glass, decorative enamels, chemical equipment |