Uses of Gold in Architectural Glazing
Topics Covered
Overview
Gold Coating on Windows
Gold in Architectural Glazing
Overview
Gold
has been used as a thin coating in building glazing to reflect heat
radiation, keeping buildings cool in summer and warmer in winter.
Gold Coating on Windows
Ordinary window glass is almost completely transparent to solar
radiation (from the ultra violet to the infrared wavelengths). Thus
large glazing areas of many buildings can cause over heating of
interior rooms and offices and increased loading on air conditioning
installations. The design of glazing to reduce this affect has
sometimes used thin gold coatings on the glass, because vacuum
deposited films of gold have excellent infrared shielding capability.
In making these materials, it is obviously important that the amount
of visible light transmitted by the glass is acceptable and this can be
controlled by the thickness of the gold
film and the glass itself. Double glazing, with gold
coatings, is also effective in reducing heat loss to the outside of
buildings during winter.
Gold in Architectural Glazing
The use of gold in architectural glazing is illustrated by the
Royal Bank Plaza building in Toronto. The building has 14,000 windows
all coated with pure gold (70,000g in total). The gold
reduces heating and ventilation costs inside the building, thereby
making it cost effective. Eureka Tower, the second tallest residential
building in the world, has 24 carat gold
plated glass windows on the top 8 floors of the building, and was
officially opened in October 2006.
For more information on the science and technology of this
application download this paper from the archives of the journal Gold
Bulletin. Manufacturing gold-coated
glass is rather an expensive process (due to the use of vacuum
technology rather than precious metal cost) and so research is
currently underway to develop new techniques to make these materials.
They may involve the use of gold
nanoparticulate coatings to accurately tune the reflective capability
of the glazing. An added advantage of this emerging technology is that
a more appealing range of glazing colours can be obtained
Source: World Gold Council
For more information on this source please visit World
Gold Council
Date Added: Nov 7, 2009
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