Heat sealing is nothing more than an aluminum profile, separated by a thermal bridge. The thermal bridge, as a rule, is made of polyamide, which conducts heat poorly and gives thermal insulation to the structure. The production process includes the process of inserting the thermal bridge between aluminum profiles and seaming (crimping) the polymer insert in the profiles on a special automatic line. Thus, we get a single profile consisting of several cameras.
The warm profile allows us to significantly improve the insulating properties of the aluminum system and to eliminate the effect of freezing. Glass doors and shop-fronts, windows and transparent domes, mirror facades of high-risers and skyscrapers have long entered our lives and have become an integral part of urban architecture. Translucent aluminum structures were used more in industrial buildings, but now with the introduction of thermal shuttering they can more often be found in public buildings - schools and hospitals, kindergartens and private residential buildings, in cottages and townhouses.