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के बारे में कंपनी की खबरें Introduction: Glass Selection Defines the Quality of Luxury Living
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Introduction: Glass Selection Defines the Quality of Luxury Living

2025-11-28
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Introduction: Glass Selection Defines the Quality of Luxury Living

 

In the renovation of high-end villas and luxury houses, the selection of glass for aluminum alloy doors and windows has long been a key factor in enhancing the living experience. High-quality glass not only amplifies the structural advantages of aluminum alloy doors and windows but also achieves multiple functions such as sound insulation, heat insulation, safety, and energy efficiency through scientific material selection and design, creating a quiet, comfortable, energy-saving, and environmentally friendly luxury living space for homeowners. Currently, Hollow Glass, LOW-E Glass, Vacuum Glass (Hollow Glass Filled with Inert Gas), and Laminated Glass are the mainstream choices in the aluminum alloy door and window market. Among them, Hollow Glass and LOW-E Glass have become the preferred combination for high-end residences due to their outstanding comprehensive performance. This article will detailedly analyze the performance advantages of these four core glass types, with a particular focus on the core value of Hollow Glass and LOW-E Glass, providing professional references for homeowners in their selection.

के बारे में नवीनतम कंपनी की खबर Introduction: Glass Selection Defines the Quality of Luxury Living  0

1. Hollow Glass: The Fundamental Core of Sound and Heat Insulation

As a basic configuration for aluminum alloy doors and windows, Hollow Glass serves as the core for sound and heat insulation with its unique composite structure. It forms a sealed air layer between the glass chambers by combining two or three layers of glass. This air layer acts like a natural "barrier"—it not only blocks the direct circulation of air with the outside but also effectively interrupts the transmission path of sound, achieving a significant noise reduction effect. Meanwhile, the aluminum frame of Hollow Glass is filled with special desiccants, which maintain long-term dryness of the air inside the glass chamber through the gaps on the frame. This fundamentally avoids condensation issues and further improves thermal insulation performance, making it an important component of energy-saving in modern buildings.​
In the energy consumption of modern buildings, air conditioning cooling accounts for 55%, and lighting accounts for 23%. As the thinnest and fastest heat-conducting material in building exteriors, the energy efficiency of glass directly affects the overall building energy consumption. Relying on its excellent thermal insulation effect, Hollow Glass can effectively reduce heat exchange between indoor and outdoor spaces: it blocks external high temperatures from entering in summer and retains indoor warmth in winter, significantly reducing the operating load of air conditioning and heating equipment, and truly realizing the dual value of energy conservation and environmental protection.​
There is a recognized conclusion in the industry regarding the sound insulation performance of Hollow Glass: the thicker the air layer, the better the noise control effect. Currently, the common air layer thicknesses of Hollow Glass on the market are 9A and 12A. However, high-end brands such as "Shengrong" offer Hollow Glass with an air layer thickness of up to 27A. Combined with the industry's pioneering integrated bending technology for hollow aluminum strips and a three-seal rubber strip design, the airtightness of the glass chamber reaches the extreme, achieving a sound insulation effect of "no gap for sound to enter". Even when living beside a noisy urban main road, homeowners can still enjoy a quiet indoor environment.

 

2. Vacuum Glass (Hollow Glass Filled with Inert Gas): An Advanced Sound and Heat Insulation Solution

Vacuum Glass (Hollow Glass Filled with Inert Gas) is an advanced upgraded version of Hollow Glass and has been favored by more and more high-end residences in recent years. Based on the structure of Hollow Glass, it fills the sealed air layer with colorless, odorless, and non-toxic inert gases (such as argon and nitrogen). Utilizing the extremely low thermal conductivity of inert gases, it further slows down the transmission speed of heat and sound in the hollow layer, while enhancing thermal insulation performance and significantly improving the sound insulation effect of doors and windows.​


Compared with ordinary Hollow Glass, Vacuum Glass (Hollow Glass Filled with Inert Gas) has slightly lower durability. However, the filling of inert gas can effectively protect the Low-E coating on the glass surface (especially the off-line Low-E coating), reducing oxidation and wear of the coating and significantly extending the service life of the glass. In practical use, when Vacuum Glass (Hollow Glass Filled with Inert Gas) with an appropriate shading coefficient is selected, it can effectively block solar radiant heat and keep the room cool in summer. In winter, when the outdoor temperature drops to -20°C, the inner surface temperature of Vacuum Glass (Hollow Glass Filled with Inert Gas) is only 3-5°C lower than the indoor air temperature, completely eliminating the trouble of "cold windows" and keeping the room warm and comfortable at all times.​


From the perspective of heat transfer principles, heat is transmitted mainly through three methods: conduction, convection, and radiation. By evacuating air or filling with inert gas, Vacuum Glass (Hollow Glass Filled with Inert Gas) first blocks heat exchange caused by air convection; second, the low thermal conductivity of inert gas reduces heat conduction; and when combined with LOW-E Glass, it can further block thermal radiation, forming a "triple protection" thermal insulation system. In terms of sound insulation performance, the sound insulation capacity of Vacuum Glass (Hollow Glass Filled with Inert Gas) is 4dB higher than that of ordinary Hollow Glass. Laminated Glass and Vacuum Glass (Hollow Glass Filled with Inert Gas) perform similarly in mid-low frequency ranges, both significantly outperforming Hollow Glass.

 

Vacuum Glass (Hollow Glass Filled with Inert Gas) has higher sound insulation capacity in the low-frequency range. This is mainly because the four sides of Vacuum Glass (Hollow Glass Filled with Inert Gas) are rigidly connected, making it more resistant to deformation and stiffer than other glass types. The sound insulation capacity in the low-frequency range is affected by stiffness—the higher the stiffness, the better the sound insulation performance. In the low-frequency range, the sound insulation capacity slightly decreases as the frequency increases, which is the result of the combined effect of stiffness and mass.

 

3. Laminated Glass: Dual Protection of Safety and Sound Insulation

Laminated Glass is a composite glass composed of two layers of glass with a layer of PVB (polyvinyl butyral) film sandwiched in between. Its core advantage lies in the dual protection of safety and sound insulation. The PVB film has excellent adhesion and damping properties, and the damping layer formed can effectively dampen the vibration of the glass (sound is generated through vibration), thereby effectively blocking noise. Additionally, Laminated Glass is much thicker than ordinary glass, with strong vibration resistance and explosion-proof performance, making it a recognized safety glass.​
In high-end sound-insulating doors and windows, double-layer or multi-layer Laminated Glass is widely used. Especially, tempered Laminated Glass plays a crucial role in the structure of sunrooms. In the market, high-end door and window brands usually adopt a combination of double-layer Laminated Glass and Hollow Glass, which is known as Hollow Laminated Glass.​
For example, Shengrong Hollow Laminated Glass is equipped with a highly airtight design structure, three-seal rubber strips, and broken-bridge aluminum with a multi-cavity composite structure. This combination can reduce noise by approximately 40 decibels, maintaining a quiet indoor environment of 35 decibels (equivalent to the noise level of a library) and meeting the sound insulation needs for low, medium, and high-frequency urban noise simultaneously.​
The greatest advantage of Laminated Glass is its safety: if the glass is accidentally broken, the glass shards will not fall off but only form cracks, and the glass can still be used continuously, eliminating the risk of injury from glass shards. Moreover, Laminated Glass also has excellent sound insulation, wear resistance, and high-temperature resistance, and is not easily damaged.

 

4. LOW-E Glass: The Energy-Saving Champion, a Standard Configuration for High-End Doors and Windows

LOW-E Glass, also known as low-emissivity glass, is produced by coating one or two layers of 10-20 nanometer thick metallic silver films on high-quality float glass substrates using vacuum magnetron sputtering technology. Silver is the material with the lowest emissivity in nature, which can reduce the emissivity of glass from 0.84 to 0.1 or even lower, reducing radiant heat loss by nearly 90%. Thus, LOW-E Glass is a high-energy-saving product.​
LOW-E Glass is one of the common configurations for high-end aluminum alloy doors and windows. The silver layer in the LOW-E Glass coating can reflect more than 98% of far-infrared thermal radiation, directly reflecting heat like a mirror reflecting light. LOW-E Glass can reduce the solar radiation entering the room, and has excellent thermal insulation and energy-saving effects for heating in winter and cooling in summer.​
It is worth noting that the energy-saving effect of ordinary triple-glazed double-hollow glass is not as good as that of single-cavity glass using LOW-E Glass under normal circumstances! Using single or multiple layers of LOW-E Glass (single-silver, double-silver, or triple-silver) can only reduce thermal radiation, convective heat transfer, and thermal conduction. To achieve more outstanding thermal insulation and a certain level of sound insulation performance, it is necessary to combine LOW-E Glass with Hollow Glass—that is, the commonly used LOW-E Hollow Glass.​
The advantage of LOW-E Hollow Glass lies not only in energy saving but also in sound insulation. It combines the low-emissivity characteristics of LOW-E Glass with the air-layer sound insulation structure of Hollow Glass. While blocking heat transfer, it blocks sound transmission through the air layer, achieving dual improvements in energy saving and sound insulation. In addition, the coating of LOW-E Glass can effectively filter ultraviolet rays, reducing the aging of indoor furniture, floors, curtains, etc., caused by ultraviolet radiation, extending their service life, and protecting the skin of family members from ultraviolet damage.

 


For homeowners of high-end villas and luxury houses, the core principle of selection is "matching according to needs":​

 

Conclusion: Glass Selection Empowers Luxury Living

The selection of glass for aluminum alloy doors and windows may seem simple, but it directly determines the comfort, safety, energy efficiency, and environmental friendliness of the living space. Hollow Glass serves as the fundamental core, building the first line of defense for sound and heat insulation; LOW-E Glass acts as the energy-saving champion, becoming a standard configuration for high-end residences; Vacuum Glass (Hollow Glass Filled with Inert Gas) and Laminated Glass provide advanced solutions for specific needs.​
In practical selection, homeowners should reasonably match different glass types based on their living environment (noise, climate), usage scenarios (bedrooms, sunrooms), and functional needs (energy saving, safety). In particular, attention should be paid to the combined use of Hollow Glass and LOW-E Glass, allowing aluminum alloy doors and windows to truly become a plus for luxury living and enabling homeowners to enjoy a high-quality living experience in a quiet, comfortable, and energy-saving environment.​