Three innovative solutions that form part of our glass portfolio; three concrete examples providing a brief but explanatory roadmap to Isoclima’s projects.
One of our most distinguishing features is that of being a versatile, almost “chameleon-like” company. With high quality products meeting every customer need, we are always able to find the right, most suitable solution for every requirement. While many associate us, among other things, with electronically tintable glass for the automotive industry, many other prestigious industries - such as the yachting and aerospace sectors - also require our support. These three examples are a direct case in point.
Variable transparency, straight from the future
Have you ever heard of variable transparency? It is a technology whereby transparency can be modulated through smart human or artificial intelligence. In this context, the elements driving development are comfort and the technological challenges of customers. Transparency appears as an optical window on the electromagnetic spectrum of radiation that controls visible-light and near-infrared transmittance. Based on specific visibility or privacy requirements, therefore, it is possible to adjust the amount of solar radiation that is let in.
Light and thin yet strong and durable: our glass portfolio for the safety of people
It may seem like a paradox - how can thin, light glass protect people? - but it is not. This result can be achieved through the use of innovative technologies. Our glass protects against both accidental and intentional threats, ensuring utmost safety for the people and objects within an environment. All this is achieved using front-end technologies to reduce weight and thickness to a minimum, without giving up on first-rate resistance. As with electronically tintable glass, here too science plays a fundamental role, alongside the ability to design and produce. At Isoclima, we stress glass to the limit so as to achieve excellent performance against threats, while also ensuring space savings and reducing the weight of the glass.
Communicating glass
To think of glass surfaces as going from passive elements of design to active components connected with the world and able to receive and transmit information is somewhat of a Copernican revolution. We are developing products that are increasingly interconnected and allow certain features to be communicated and activated. Specifically, electronic and photonic devices such as interactive sensors and displays are integrated into glass to connect and exchange information.
If electronically tintable glass felt like science fiction, then get a load of that! The future is here, and we at Isoclima are an integral part of it.