Description

What is used to thermally insulate a liquefied gas tank at -160 degrees C, an industrial driveable floor or a museum flat green roof? When polyurethane foam rots and rock wool becomes saturated, Cellular Glass enters the scene: a black, mineral, eternal block.

01From Recycling to Glass Expansion

Glass waste is ground to a fine powder and mixed with a tiny percentage of carbon, then fired at about 850 degrees C. The heat melts the glass while the carbon oxidises, creating CO2 bubbles that leaven the liquid mass. The result is a rigid blackish block of millions of microscopic pure-glass cells, hermetically sealed and separated, with insulating power that never degrades.

02Incompressibility and Infinite Vapour Barrier

Cellular glass is the only building insulator with zero viscous flow (Zero Creep). It withstands colossal static and dynamic loads (up to 160 t/m2) for centuries without deforming a single millimetre. It also blocks the molecular passage of water vapour completely (mu = infinite), acting simultaneously as insulator and absolute vapour barrier.

Technical identity

Standards

European and international references applicable.

EN 13167 (Isolanti termici vetro cellulare)EN 13501-1 (Reazione al fuoco A1)EN 1609 (Assorbimento acqua)

Physical properties

Maximum compressive load1600 kN/m2 (~ 160 t/m2)
Creep (viscous flow)Zero — struttura vitrea rigida
Service temperature range-260 gradi C / +480 gradi C
Installation methodBitume a caldo 200 gradi C (Compact Roof) — no tasselli

Usage environment

HOT BITUMEN INSTALLATION: rigid blocks are laid by dipping faces in bitumen melted at 200 degrees C and rubbing them together. The bitumen welds the surface glass cells creating a monolithic watertight block with no escape paths for water. CUTTING: on site, cut by rubbing a simple hand wood saw; the thin cell walls crumble locally releasing a pungent but harmless H2S odour.

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