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A Short History of Glass
The History of GlassGlass is naturally formed when certain
types of rocks melt as a result of high-temperatures such as volcanic
eruptions, lightning strikes or the impact of meteorites, and then
cools and solidify rapidly.According to Roman historians they
became aware of the existence of glass accidentally in the region of
Syria around 5000 BC. This short history looks at the birth and
evolution of man-made glass and the new developments in smart glass.Glass
beads are thought to be the earliest man-made glass they were mainly
opaque and are thought to date back to around 3500 BC. They have been
found in Egypt and Eastern Mesopotamia. The oldest fragments of glass
vases date back to 1600 BC and were found in Mesopotamia.Egyptian
craftsmen are thought to have begun developing a method for producing
glass pots around 1500 BC by dipping a core mould of compressed sand
into molten glass and then turning the mould so that molten glass
adhered to it. There is not much evidence of further advancement until
the 900 BC. Over the following 500 years glass production centred on
Alessandria from where it is thought to have spread to Italy.The
first glassmaking manual dates back to around 650 BC. A major
breakthrough in glassmaking was the discovery of glassblowing some time
between 27 BC and AD 14, attributed to Syrian craftsmen. The long thin
metal tube used in the blowing process has changed very little since
then.The Romans spread glassmaking technologies the result of
their conquests. During the reign of the emperor Augustus, glass
objects began to appear throughout Italy, in France, Germany and
Switzerland. It was the Romans who began to use glass for architectural
purposes, with the discovery of clear glass. Cast glass windows with
poor optical qualities began to appear in the most important buildings
in.Archaeological excavations on the island of Torcello near
Venice, Italy, have unearthed objects from the late 7th and early 8th
centuries which bear witness to the transition from ancient to early
Middle Ages production of glass.Towards the years 1000 AD
significant changes in European glassmaking techniques took place.
Given the difficulties in importing raw materials, soda glass was
gradually replaced by glass made using the potash obtained from the
burning of trees.The 11th century saw the development by German
glass craftsmen of a technique - then further developed by Venetian
craftsmen in the 13th century - for the production of glass sheets. By
blowing a hollow glass sphere and swinging it vertically, gravity would
pull the glass into a cylindrical "pod" measuring as much as 3 metres
long, with a width of up to 45 cm. While still hot, the ends of the pod
were cut off and the resultant cylinder cut lengthways and laid
horizontal. The panes thus created would then be joined with lead
strips and pieced together to create windows. Glazing remained,
however, a great luxury up to the late Middle Ages, with royal palaces
and churches the most likely buildings to have glass windows. Stained
glass windows reached their height as the Middle Ages drew to a close.In
1688, in France, a new method was developed for the production of plate
glass, principally for use in mirrors, whose optical merits had, until
then, left much to be desired. The molten glass was poured onto a
special table and rolled out flat. After cooling, the plate glass was
ground on large round tables by means of rotating cast iron discs and
increasingly fine abrasive sands, and then polished using felt disks.
The result of this plate pouring process was flat glass with good
optical transmission qualities. When coated on one side with a
reflective metal high-quality mirrors could be produced.It was
not until the later stages of the Industrial Revolution that mechanical
technology for mass production and in-depth scientific research into
the relationship between the composition of glass and its physical
qualities began to appear in the industry.A key figure and one
of the forefathers of contemporary glass research was the German
scientist Otto Schott, who used scientific methods to study the effects
of various chemical elements on the optical and thermal properties of
glass. In the field of optical glass, Schott teamed up with Ernst Abbe,
to make important technological advances.In the production of
flat glass the first real innovation came in 1905 when a Belgian,
(Fourcault), managed to vertically draw a continuous sheet of glass of
a consistent width from the tank. Commercial production of sheet glass
using the Fourcault process eventually got under way in 1914. An
off-shoot of evolution in flat glass production was the strengthening
of glass by means of lamination.The float process developed
after 1945 by Pilkington combined the brilliant finish of sheet glass
with the optical qualities of plate glass.Now glass production
has taken another great leap forward, privacy glass is the newest and
currently most upmarket glass available. With only a touch of a remote
control or the turn of a dial the glass can be made to change opacity.
New glass windows on office blocks can be set to let in less light as
the sun becomes stronger saving on air-conditioning costs.
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