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Integrated Automation Systems signs agreement with Praxair to market innovative gas fill technology

Solon, Ohio, August 30, 2011 – Integrated Automation Systems, Inc., has entered an agreement with Praxair, Inc. (NYSE: PX), to market its breakthrough OptiGas gas filling system for insulating glass. The companies have been co-developing the systems for two years.

The patent-pending OptiGas system fills insulating glass with krypton, argon or any mix of both. Krypton is a rare gas with excellent thermal insulating properties. Through a proprietary filling process, the OptiGas system can reduce krypton consumption by up to 70% per unit and provide analytical verification of gas content for the insulated glass units.

This advanced technology enables window and door companies to reduce their gas costs significantly by eliminating krypton waste.

Praxair and Integrated Automation Systems will be introducing the OptiGas filling system in booth 1151 at the GlassBuild America Expo in Atlanta, Ga., September 12 -14, 2011. The booth will feature live demonstrations of the new technology. More […]

2011-08-30T17:15:37-04:00August 30th, 2011|

See OptiGas and ThermalCERT at GlassBuild 2011

GlassBuild America exhibitorSee OptiGas and ThermalCERT September 10-12 at GlassBuild America 2011 in Atlanta in booth 1151, where Praxair will be our co-host. If you have questions about our show participation or wish to reserve a time slot that fits your meeting schedule, please contact Mike McHugh at mike@savekrypton.com or 330-954-3070.

2017-06-14T15:24:53-04:00August 1st, 2011|

Issues with conventional gas filling

OptiGas was developed from nearly three decades of frustration with conventional gas filling techniques for insulating glass.

What’s the problem with gas filling as done in most fabrication in North America?

  • Conventional gas filling is inexact. Gas content is measured not by what is in the IG, but by what is and isn’t coming out.
  • U values are unverified.
  • Operators must manually identify and route the right units to the right fill station, resulting in inefficiencies and errors.
  • You can fill with krypton or argon through one nozzle, but not both. That takes two wands or stations and two procedures.
  • Actual yields are difficult if not impossible to determine with conventional gas filling.
  • With conventional gas filling, you don’t know how much krypton is in your cylinders. Leaks go undetected. You carry extra cylinders to compensate.
  • With every unit you fill, half the krypton spills on the floor. Which is the same as throwing away every other cylinder you […]
2011-08-30T17:17:59-04:00June 1st, 2011|

OptiGas offers gas-filling breakthroughs

SOLON, OHIO — Integrated Automation Systems is introducing new gas filling systems that deliver huge improvements in a critical mostly overlooked part of insulating glass production.

The new OptiGas systems offer precise, tunable and consistent automated gas-filling that essentially eliminates krypton waste and operator errors. And with the optional ThermalCERT by OptiGas thermal conductivity testing system,  you get instant verification of true thermal performance and a program you can use in your marketing.

“OptiGas gives you complete control of the marketable thermal performance of all your product lines and units,” said Mike McHugh, president of Integrated Automation Systems. “You can pinpoint thermal performance for each line, produce high-performance U value IG for the lowest possible cost and cost-effectively use Krypton across more of your mid-value product lines.”

OptiGas uses a patent pending process to efficiently fill insulating glass with Argon and Krypton through a single nozzle, McHugh said. The process measures the actual gas inserted into the space, rather […]

2017-06-14T15:24:53-04:00January 11th, 2011|
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