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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.
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