Perforated metal explained

Perforated metal, also known as perforated sheet, perforated plate, or perforated screen, is sheet metal that has been manually or mechanically stamped or punched using CNC technology or in some cases laser cutting to create different holes sizes, shapes and patterns. Materials used to manufacture perforated metal sheets include stainless steel, cold rolled steel, galvanized steel, brass, aluminum, tinplate, copper, Monel, Inconel, titanium, plastic, and more.[1]

The process of perforating metal sheets has been practiced for over 150 years. In the late 19th century, metal screens were used as an efficient means of separating coal. The first perforators were laborers who would manually punch individual holes into the metal sheet. This proved to be an inefficient and inconsistent method which led to the development of new techniques, such as perforating the metal with a series of needles arranged in a way that would create the desired hole pattern.

Modern day perforation methods involve the use of technology and machines. Common equipment used for the perforation of metal include rotary pinned perforation rollers, die and punch presses, and laser perforations.[2]

Applications

Perforated metal has been utilized across a variety of industries including, but not limited to:

Benefits

The acoustic performance of perforated metal helps people or workers to limit health effects from noise. Studies have shown that perforated metals help reduce sound levels.[4]

Studies have shown that having buildings use perforated metal sheets in front of their façade can bring in one study 29% energy savings (HVAC + Lighting estimated consumption in 1 year) and in the second one 45% energy savings (heating, ventilation, air conditioning). Depending on the location of the building (intensity of the external sun), solar irradiation can be decrease by 77.9%.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Perforated Metal - Patterns And Materials - Metalex. Metalex. 2016-02-02. en-US.
  2. Web site: How Perforated Metal is Manufactured Today. www.strategicia.com. 2016-02-02.
  3. Web site: Architectural Metals Infill Panels Signage Hendrick Manufacturing. www.hendrickmfg.com. 2016-03-07.
  4. Steward. William. Perforated metal systems as sound absorbing surfaces. The Construction Specifier. February 2007.