Laminated glass

Laminated Glass is a high-safety composite glass unit redefining protection, functionality, and durability in modern architecture—evolving from "optional" to "essential" for diverse spaces by solving traditional glass flaws: shatter risk, poor sound insulation, and limited multi-scenario adaptability. Its core edge lies in the proprietary laminated structure: two or more glass layers (float, tempered, or tinted) bonded with tough polyvinyl butyral (PVB), ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA), or thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU) interlayers, which hold glass shards together when broken, plus optional functional coatings (anti-UV, anti-glare, or anti-fingerprint). This delivers a service life of 15–20 years—2x longer than standard annealed glass’ 7–10 years—while excelling in four key areas: Superior safety performance (avoids dangerous shard scattering during breakage, reducing injury risk; resists forced entry (withstands 5+ impacts from crowbars/sledgehammers), outperforming standard glass by…

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