In 1902, the French corporation
Le Carbone obtained a patent for coating glass objects with
celluloid to render them less susceptible to cracking or breaking. Laminated glass was invented in 1903 by the
French chemist
Édouard Bénédictus (1878–1930), inspired by a laboratory accident: a glass flask had become coated with the plastic
cellulose nitrate, and when dropped it shattered but did not break into pieces. In 1909 Bénédictus filed a patent, after hearing about a car accident where two women were severely injured by glass debris. In 1911, he formed the
Société du Verre Triplex, which fabricated a glass-plastic
composite to reduce injuries in
car accidents. Production of Triplex glass was slow and painstaking, so it was expensive; it was not immediately widely adopted by
automobile manufacturers, but laminated glass was widely used in the eyepieces of
gas masks during
World War I. In 1912, the process was licensed to the British
Triplex Safety Glass company. Subsequently, in the United States, both
Libbey-Owens-Ford and
Du Pont with
Pittsburgh Plate Glass produced Triplex glass. Meanwhile, in 1905, John Crewe Wood, a solicitor in Swindon, Wiltshire, England, patented a laminated glass for use in windshields. The layers of glass were bonded together by
Canada balsam. In 1906, he founded the Safety Motor Screen Company to produce and sell his product. In 1927, the Canadian chemists Howard W. Matheson and Frederick W. Skirrow invented the plastic polyvinyl butyral (PVB). By 1936, United States companies had discovered that laminated "safety glass" consisting of a layer of PVB between two layers of glass would not discolor and was not easily penetrated during accidents. Within five years, the new safety glass had substantially replaced its predecessor. In the
Road Traffic Act 1930, the British Parliament required new cars to have safety-glass windshields, but did not specifically require laminated glass. By 1939, of safety glass manufactured by British Indestructo Glass, Ltd. of London The "Indestructo" safety glass was chosen because "it gives the most complete protection. In addition to being splinter-proof, it is crystal clear and permanently non-discolourable." This quote hints at issues that prevented wider use of laminated glass earlier. ==Specifications==