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Saving the World (and $15 B / yr) with New Windows?!  E-mail
Written by Philip Proefrock   
Thursday, 27 March 2008

vacuum insulated glassIn terms of energy efficiency, windows are one of the biggest contributors to heat loss from buildings. But a new window technology called vacuum-insulated glass (VIG) being developed by Guardian Industries could allow for windows that can provide insulation values comparable to, well...walls, with a new double-pane glass with a vacuum between the panes.

The principle behind the thermos, namely that a vacuum is a very effective insulator, is now being applied to windows, which are one of the most energy inefficient parts of a building, responsible for up to 30% of the heating needed. Heat is transferred by one of three methods, conduction, convection, or radiation. A vacuum prevents transfer by convection or conduction, and a low-E coating on windows can block much of the radiation transfer.

The manufacturer, Guardian Industries, is reportedly hoping to have this glass commercially available by the end of 2009. More importantly, while other researchers have been exploring the idea of vacuum glass for several years, Guardian is expecting to be able to produce this glass at a reasonable cost .

The head of the Building Technologies Division at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, was quoted as saying, “This performance level would convert most windows in heating climates into net energy suppliers, providing more energy to the home via passive solar gain (even facing north) than the window loses...If you could convert every window [in the U.S.] to this performance level, you would save homeowners about $15 billion each year.”

via: BuildingGreen.com

A longer version of this article is cross-posted at Green Building Elements


Comments (6)add
...
written by Batman , March 27, 2008
Now just get it in the gov't buildings and they can lower our taxes >.>
Big in Japan
written by Andy Stannard , March 28, 2008
I believe that this window technology is allready being produced in Japan at the moment. The Japanese version uses thinner panes of glass that are seperated by a much thiner gap than standard double glazing. In order for the two sheets to not be sucked together by the vacume many tiny spacers are inserted between the panes.

The glass is sealed with another layer of glass round the sides that produces the airtight seal. Due to the thiner double glazzing sheet they can be used to replace glass that was single glazzed before.
R12 upto R15 windows are already availab
written by Mark Bartosik , March 28, 2008
Last week I fitted some AlpenEG (www.alpeneg.com) windows, many are R11.6 and made with impact rated glass (could have got better R value without impact glass).

They are affordable, and wow are they an improvement over the old windows and normal double glassed units. The wall temp on a 32F night was 68F and the inner window temp was 67F, so only a 1F difference compared with the wall! Prior windows gave about 10F difference.

AlpenEG -- highly recommended.

Heard of triple-glassing?
written by Mathias , March 28, 2008
Anyone know how these compare to the triple-glassing windows with inert argon gas between the panes that are pretty much standard in Scandinavian countries?

/Mathias
net energy gain
written by kballs , March 28, 2008
It sounds like they allow radiated solar heat in (by allowing non-infrared/visible light heat energy in) and reflect infrared from inside the home back inside... this would be great in the winter, but in the summer it puts a load on your A/C (so in that case you'd want them to also reflect some of the visible light to reduce the heat gain during the summer and allow them to be closer to neutral in the winter while keeping the building cooler in the summer).
Not as new as it looks
written by Evelin Mollers , March 29, 2008
I agree with the notion of this post.

Nearly vacuum windows would be perfect, but I think this new windows are not so new at all. I have seen this type of technology very often in Europe where windows are used for shielding of noise and heat.

I doubt that this new windows are a new technology. I think this might be just an upgrade.
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Philip Proefrock
About the author:

Philip Proefrock is an architect and photographer in southeast Michigan.

His award winning projects include the Malletts Creek Branch Library which has the first completed commercial green roof in the state of Michigan.

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