Shalom EO is a leading supplier of Optical Components, Infrared Lenses, Laser Crystals and Components, Optical Filters, Infrared Optics, Wafers and Substrates, and Scintillators
Mechanical Strength of Sapphire Windows

Mechanical Strength of Sapphire Windows

Sapphire (crystalline aluminum oxide, Al₂O₃) is one of the strongest transparent materials available.

When used as sapphire windows, sapphire provides outstanding durability against mechanical stress, scratching, and impact.

What These Numbers Mean:

Hardness: Sapphire resists scratching by almost everything except diamond and a few synthetic super-hard materials.

Compressive Strength: It can withstand extremely high pressures without breaking — great for high-pressure optical applications (like deep-sea cameras or aerospace windows).

Tensile Strength: It resists being pulled apart but not as high as metals; however, still excellent among ceramics.

Fracture Toughness: Better than glass, but still more brittle than metals — sudden impacts at the wrong angle can cause cracks.

Important Notes:

Orientation matters: Mechanical strength can vary depending on the crystal orientation (c-plane, a-plane, r-plane, m-plane sapphire).
For maximum strength, manufacturers usually use c-plane sapphire windows.

Thickness matters: Thicker sapphire windows naturally handle more mechanical load.

Edge preparation: Polished or beveled edges reduce stress concentration and improve mechanical strength dramatically.

Practical Applications Where Strength Matters:

Protective covers for high-speed cameras

Aerospace sensor windows

High-pressure viewport windows

Medical and defense optics

Watch crystals and scanner windows