Window Glass – What You Should Be Looking For in Glass for Your Replacement Windows
Window Glass – What You Should Be Looking For in Glass for Your Replacement Windows
New windows are an investment that can increase the value of your home. At the same time, new windows cut your energy bills, increase your comfort, and reduce maintenance costs.
Since most of the window area is glass, glass performance has the biggest impact on energy savings. Glass technology has made tremendous strides. Things like low conductivity spacers, low emissivity, or Low-E, coatings, and gas filling have drastically cut the amount of energy that flows through the glass.
Two pieces of glass separated by an air space and properly sealed on the edges, have more insulating value than a single piece of glass. Low-E coatings represent the greatest advancement in glass technology since the use of two pieces of glass.
Many people believe that the purpose of Low-E coating is to reduce the fading of furniture and carpeting. While Low-E coating can do that, the significant advantage it offers is a drastic reduction in energy loss. Low-E glass has metallic coatings that are a few atoms thick. Technically, these coatings lower the emissivity of the glass, thus the name, Low-E. In homeowner terms, it serves the role of a heat reflecting mirror that reflects heat energy from the warm side of the glass back out. In the wintertime, Low-E glass reflects the heat from your home back into the room. In the summertime, it reflects the outdoor heat back out. As a result, it significantly effects energy consumption. You should never settle for products made with regular clear glass. That would be like buying a car that gets poor gas mileage.
More efficient glass units also use inert gases, like argon and krypton, to improve the energy efficiency of the glass. They are less conductive than normal air, reducing energy loss across the air space between the two panes of glass. It is important to understand that the methods used to trap the gas between the two pieces of glass have a big impact on its insulating abilities and longevity.
Another important parameter that affects the energy savings of an insulating glass unit is the type of spacer that is used between the two pieces of glass. Today’s better products have foam spacers and low conductivity metal spacers in place of aluminum spacers that are fading in popularity.
The latest in glass technology also helps you save energy – physical energy. Special treatments on the outside surface of the glass drastically cut down the frequency of how often you have to clean it. The best performing windows do this by using the combination of a photocatalytic effect and a hydrophilic effect. Marketing as “Neat” glass, it has an invisible, durable and permanent coating of silicon dioxide and titanium dioxide bonded to the glass. The titanium harnesses the power of the sun’s UV rays to loosen dirt. The silicon makes the glass much smoother than ordinary glass, so rainwater sheets off evenly and evaporates quickly, taking …