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Science Technology

Ultra-pure Glass Made with Levitation 36

lc_overlord writes "Space.com has a story on a new type of glass. 'Using static electricity fields to levitate the material, scientists were able to construct a pure glass, free of any contamination typically associated with containers.' The glass is made of rare earth aluminum oxide and small amounts of silicon dioxide."
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Ultra-pure Glass Made with Levitation

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  • Frist PSot!"! (Score:2, Insightful)

    And read TFA... One question - why do they want to conduct this experiments in microgravity, when the major effects stem from the contact-free nature of the production process? Any thoughts?
    • Re:Frist PSot!"! (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward
      The might want to prevent seperation of the Alumina and Silica, or help prevent larger eddies from convection from forming, or forming with a common orientation.
    • Re:Frist PSot!"! (Score:3, Insightful)

      by putaro ( 235078 )
      Because it's hard to levitate a significant amount of material?
      • Re:Frist PSot!"! (Score:1, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward
        I know soviets could do it with kilograms back in the day. Which compared to launching a foundtry into space, works out pretty good.

        Things are just a little weirder than is immediatly obvious when freed from gravity. There's more going on than, "Hey, free floating!"
        • But compared to building one in space when the mass is already there, is pretty crappy if you're going to use the glass in orbit. If you're going to use it on earth, then manufacturing in space is probably not going to be very useful. On the other hand you could build bulky landing craft and splash your cargoes down in the ocean, then pick them up, and recycle the landing craft after extracting the cargo. This might be an effective way to drop cargoes from orbit before the development of the elevator.
    • In earth's gravity, the experiment undergoes heating /cooling stresses that do not not exist in micro-gravity.
  • by A55M0NKEY ( 554964 ) on Friday April 02, 2004 @07:49PM (#8751910) Homepage Journal
    I was wondering if anyone knew if it were feasible to pole fused ( amorphous ) SiO2 so that it was piezoelectric when it hardened similar to how piezo ceramics are poled today. I would especially be interested in a fluorescently doped piezoelectric substance - maybe SiO2 doped w/Nd?
  • Here's an ironic application... Suppose the obscenely pure glass were used to make tiles to cover something passing in and out of orbit... such as a shuttle or satellite?
  • Although it probably won't work for all manufacturing processes, technology like this is a nice step forward in getting ultra-pure processed materials. Sure, it may be a while, but obviously optics can gain an advantage with this.

    Now maybe they can finally make it so my bottled water doesn't taste like plastic.
  • Is this a low-end Klein bottle for materials that would vaporise in contact with plasma?
  • Canon will make even more expensive top-of-the-line camera lenses! As if the current L-glass lenses aren't expensive enough.
  • Err... What is "rare earth aluminium"? Had I missed my chemistry lessons at school?
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion

In any formula, constants (especially those obtained from handbooks) are to be treated as variables.

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