Useful Information about Architectural Glazing
Nickel Sulphide Inclusion
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Useful Information about Architectural Glazing
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Nickel sulphide inclusion (NSI) is a microscopic particle of nickel sulphide that becomes trapped inside toughened safety glass during manufacture. During tempering this particle is frozen in a high-temperature crystalline state; over months or years it slowly reverts to its low-temperature form and expands, building local stress inside the glass. When the inclusion sits in the tensile core of the pane, that stress can trigger sudden spontaneous breakage, often producing the characteristic “butterfly” fracture pattern.

Nickel sulphide particles have two temperature-dependent stable forms:
High-temperature phase – present during the glass manufacturing and toughening process.
Low-temperature phase – the form the particle naturally adopts at normal ambient temperatures.
During toughening the glass is heated and then rapidly cooled, so the nickel sulphide particle is locked in its high-temperature phase and does not have time to change. Over months or years in service it slowly transforms into the low-temperature phase. That phase change is accompanied by a small increase in volume, which builds local tensile stress inside the glass. If the inclusion sits in the tensile (central) zone of the pane, this stress can trigger spontaneous glass breakage.
One of the most common indicators of NSI-induced glass breakage is the Butterfly Effect pattern. This distinctive breakage pattern features a singular fracture point with cracks fanning out symmetrically, resembling butterfly wings. However, confirming an NSI-related failure requires professional glass analysis.

Because nickel sulphide inclusions cannot be completely prevented or detected in intact glass, risk management focuses on reducing the chance of an affected pane being built into the project. The most effective mitigation is to specify heat-soaked toughened safety glass to EN 14179 for critical or hard-to-replace areas.
Heat soaking is a secondary process applied after toughening that significantly reduces the risk of NSI-related spontaneous breakage.
Heat Soaking (EN 14179) is a controlled thermal treatment process that exposes toughened glass to temperatures of 290°C (+/- 10°C) inside a heat soaking oven. This accelerates the transformation of Nickel Sulphide Inclusions, causing panels with impurities to shatter in a controlled environment rather than after installation.
While no process can completely eliminate the risk, Heat Soaking reduces the likelihood of NSI breakages to 1m² in every 1 million m² of glass, compared to the standard risk of 1m² in every 10,000m² of glass (as estimated by the Glass and Glazing Federation, GGF).
Heat soaking increases costs and extends lead times.
It is recommended for critical glass installations, such as inaccessible panels or glazing elements that would be costly or difficult to replace.
Architects can specify heat-soaked glass for construction projects where spontaneous breakage poses a concern.

Warranties & Insurance Coverage for Nickel Sulphide Breakages
Despite the advancements in glass manufacturing, Nickel Sulphide Inclusion remains an unpredictable phenomenon. Glass manufacturers generally do not offer warranties against NSI-related breakages.
Check your insurance policy: Many home insurance policies cover spontaneous glass breakage. Confirm with your provider to ensure coverage.
Specify heat-soaked glass: This minimises risk, particularly for projects where glass replacement would be challenging.
Guardian Industries UK Ltd acknowledges the difficulty of completely eliminating nickel contamination, which can sometimes lead to localized NSI outbreaks. Due to the nature of the phenomenon and the absence of reliable detection methods, Guardian does not provide a warranty against NSI-related breakage.

To minimise the risk of Nickel Sulphide Inclusion breakages:
Always consider Heat Soaking, especially for high-risk applications.
Consult with IQ Glass before specifying materials for your project.
Ensure insurance coverage includes protection against spontaneous breakage.
For further research, you can explore more about the scientific studies on Nickel Sulphide Inclusion and its impact on glass performance.
If you're working on a project and need expert advice on specifying heat-soaked glass, feel free to reach out to a member of our team. Ensuring your glass is as safe and reliable as possible is essential for both aesthetics and structural integrity.
This stunning project, a cantilevered house in Scotland, is featuring extensive frameless structural glass. Each panel underwent heat soak testing to minimise risks of spontaneous breakage.
You can get the full case study here.
How common is nickel sulphide breakage?
Nickel sulphide inclusion breakage is rare, but it is not possible to predict whether it will affect a particular pane or installation. The microscopic inclusions are associated with toughened safety glass and cannot currently be identified reliably during normal glass production.
The risk deserves particular consideration for overhead, high-level, oversized or difficult-to-access glazing, where replacing a pane may require specialist access or lifting equipment.
Is nickel sulphide inclusion dangerous?
When toughened safety glass breaks, it fragments into small cubes, but falling glass from height can still cause injury and usually requires urgent replacement. The main concern with nickel sulphide inclusion is the unexpected nature of the breakage and the disruption and cost of changing the glass.
Does nickel sulphide testing eliminate all risk?
No. Heat soak testing significantly reduces the risk of nickel sulphide breakage, but it cannot remove it entirely.
During the process, toughened glass is subjected to a controlled heating cycle designed to cause panes containing critical nickel sulphide inclusions to break before installation. A pane that completes the process still retains a small residual risk, so heat soak testing should be understood as risk reduction rather than a 100% guarantee.
Is nickel sulphide covered by home insurance?
Nickel sulphide breakage may be covered by home insurance, normally under the buildings section of the policy, but cover should not be assumed.
Homeowners should ask their insurer or broker to confirm whether spontaneous glass breakage is included. It is also worth checking whether the policy covers only the replacement pane or the wider costs of removal, installation and specialist access, such as scaffolding or crane hire.