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Glass Spheres (tiny)

Material ID: 497

Description

These tiny, poppy-seed sized, transparent glass spheres are made from soda-lime glass, familiar to us as the glass used for drinking vessels, bottles and windows. It is reusable and recyclable. In science, glass has a much broader definition than this transparent substance, referring to any solid which has a non-crystalline, or amorphous inner structure. It is a myth that glass is always liquid, it only really becomes a liquid when heated at 550°C, and is fully liquid at around 1000°C.

Glass spheres are perhaps most familiar to us a marbles, but smaller, industrially produced glass spheres like this are known as ballotini, from the Italian for 'small balls'. Their main applications include reflective filler for road-marking paint, and abrasives for shot blasting and metal polishing. However, they can also be engineered into perfectly regular spheres to be used as spacers in adhesives, to ensure a perfectly uniform thickness of bond, or for use as special bearings for oil drilling mechanics. Glass is a particularly non-reactive and non-degradable material which is cheap to produce, making it a versatile industrial material.

Particularities

State

Categories

Maker

Tokyu Hands

Library Details

Site

Bloomsbury

Status

In Library

Location

Glass Shelves

Form

Sphere

Handling guidance

Wash hands after handling.

Date entered collection

Saturday 11th April, 2009