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Ultra-pure Glass Made with Levitation

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."

12 of 36 comments (clear)

  1. Frist PSot!"! by Dr.+GeneMachine · · 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?

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    1. Re:Frist PSot!"! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      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.

    2. Re:Frist PSot!"! by putaro · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Because it's hard to levitate a significant amount of material?

  2. Re: Fused Silica & Flying Cars by A55M0NKEY · · Score: 2

    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?

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  3. Re:Not April Fools? by nadda · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I fail to see how this could be put to good use any time soon.
    Not sure about anytime soon, but seems if they can refine the process, could it lead to better fiber optics?

  4. Re:Hello Computer.... by K3lvin · · Score: 5, Funny

    So how long until we get transparent aluminium?

    It's already here, you just can't see it.

  5. Re:Hello Computer.... by rusty0101 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Well, if you don't mind it being Aluminium Oxide, which is a ceramic, it's been around at least two years, Article, though I seem to recall seeing a varient of this before 2000 in a Popular Science magazine.

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  6. Re:Hello Computer.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Sapphire has been around considerably longer than two years.

    Perhaps you were refering to nano-scale polycrystalline alumina, which has still be around longer than two years.

  7. Re:SuperGlass! by ColaMan · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Your glass, no matter how obscenely pure, would still melt.

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  8. Re:Eyeglasses by walt-sjc · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Think less loss in fiber optic cables, better lenses for microscopes / telescopes, etc.

  9. Re:Eyeglasses by GlassMaster · · Score: 5, Informative

    As mentioned in the article, these ultra-pure glasses are needed for industrial lasers. Impurities or contamination in a laser glass can absorb the laser energy, be ioned, and explode within the laser glass. Tradionally, large scale glass melting is performed in ceramic refractory lined tanks. The problem is that glass melts are highly corrosive and a significant amount (any amount is significant when dealing with high powered lasers) of contamination will occur.

    For the laser glass blanks used for the National Ignition Facility NIF Website, U.S. taxpayers supplied platinum lined tanks to prevent refractory contamination in the glass blanks. However, even platinum is soluble in the phosphate based glasses used for these blanks. Platinum colloids would result in catastrophic failure of the glass once the lasers where powered up So, a great deal of research has been performed by the glass science community (thank you DOE) to learn how to alter the glass chemistry via composition or processing parameters in order to incorporate these tiny levels of platinum into the glass structure and render it harmless in the finished product.

    If significant quantities of these types of glasses could be made using containerless levitation, the expense of platinum lined glass tanks and challenges of neutralizing what little platinum contaminates the glasses would be eliminated.

  10. Re:Rare earth aluminium? by dirt_puppy · · Score: 4, Informative

    I'd say, they mean, aluminium oxide glass (amorphous AlO) doped with a tiny fraction rare earth salts. Many solid substance lasers use rare earthes today, YAG (Yttrium Aluminium Granat [sp?]) for example.