Tempered glass is one of two kinds of safety glass regularly
used in applications in which standard glass could pose a potential
danger. Tempered glass is four to five times stronger than standard
glass and does not break into sharp shards when it fails. Tempered glass
is manufactured through a process of extreme heating and rapid cooling,
making it harder than normal glass.
The brittle nature of tempered glass causes it to shatter into small
oval-shaped pebbles when broken. This eliminates the danger of sharp
edges. Due to this property, along with its strength, tempered glass is
often referred to as safety glass.
The thermal process that cures tempered glass also makes it heat
resistant. Tempered glass is used to make the carafes in automatic coffee makers and
the windows in ovens. Computer screens, skylights, door windows, tub
enclosures and shower doors are more examples of places you will find
tempered glass. Building codes also require the windows of many public
structures to be made of tempered glass.
Automobiles use a different type of safety glass for the windshield and
tempered glass for the back and side windows. Windshields are made from laminated glass,
which sandwiches a sheet of plastic between two panels of glass. When
the windshield breaks, the glass panels stick to the plastic film,
rather than falling away to possibly injure the driver or other
passengers.