The
Use of Fused Silica
Source:
Procedures in Experimental Physics
by John
Strong
General remarks
on fused quartz
Formerly made only
in rod and tube form, fused quartz
is now often employed as a substitute for glass in chemical ware, and
most of the common pieces used in chemistry are now obtainable in this
material. Such articles as flasks, beakers, dishes, plates, and so forth,
are in fairly common use.
Apparatus made from
fused quartz has two chief advantages over that made from glass. The low
thermal expansion coefficient eliminates all fear of breakage due to rapid
temperature changes. A hot piece of quartz plunged into water suffers
no ill effects. Also, its relatively high melting point makes possible
the study of reactions that would be more difficult with glass.
As will be pointed
out later, many of its properties make it valuable in instruments of various
kinds and when constancy is a prime requisite. One particularly valuable
property of fused quartz is its extremely low loss of energy due to internal
friction when stresses are applied. The loss amounts to only
of that in the best of the metals. Another property of value lies in its
constancy of length. It not only has an extremely small thermal expansion
coefficient, but returns to its original length after having been heated
or cooled.
The chief disadvantage
of fused quartz is its high cost, due mainly to the fact that it has a
high melting point and demands special methods for its manufacture. The
fact that it fuses with difficulty makes the working of tubing greater
than an inch in diameter more or less impractical in the laboratory. Although
an oxyhydrogen flame becomes useful when working large pieces of quartz,
small pieces can be worked easily with an oxy-natural gas flame. An ordinary
Bunsen burner flame using natural gas is hot enough to soften small pieces.
A very useful property
discovered by C.V. Boys in
1889, and dicussed in detail later, is that fused quartz can be drawn
into fine fibers which have remarkable strength. Fibers of any size down
to 1 micron (0.0001 cm) diameter or less can be easily and rapidly produced.
No other vitreous material can in any way approach fused quartz in performance
when made into these fine fibers.
Chemica1 properties
Fused silica at room
temperature is inactive to practically all chemicals except hydrofluoric
acid and the alkalies. However, at high temperatures it reacts with most
metallic salts, forming silicates. This is due to the fact that silicon
dioxide is an acid in the general sense of the term, and as such reacts
vigorously at high temperatures with metallic oxides which are bases.
The noble metals do not form silicates, and a quartz fiber covered with
gold may be heated until the gold evaporates, without harming the fiber.
Physical properties
Thermal properties.
The coefficient of thermal expansion of fused quartz rod under no stress
has been measured with considerable accuracy.
The mean values near room temperature, defined by
are given in Table I. For comparison, steel has a coefficient of ,
or 25 times as large, while for Invar
is about . The coefficient
of thermal expansion has not been measured for various sizes of fibers
under varying amounts of strain.
TABLE I
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The coefficient of
thermal hysteresis of fused quartz is less than for any other known material.
If a substance of length I is heated from a temperature
to a temperature
and allowed to cool to t
then , where
is the residual difference in length, is a measure of the thermal hysteresis.
For quartz, this quantity is -1 to ;
that is, it contracts more than it expands. In comparison, Invar has a
similar coefficient of . This
property makes fused quartz particularly valuable when it is necessary
to maintain dimensions accurately.
If fused quartz is
held at a temperature above 1200 degrees C for some time, crystallization
gradually takes place, beginning at the surface and working inward. As
the temperature is raised, the crystallization becomes more rapid until
a temperature is reached at which the crystals melt. When quartz is worked
locally in a flame, a milky surface will form between the soft quartz
and the cool portion. This is probably due to condensation of evaporated
quartz and does no harm to the material except in appearance.
Elastic properties.
The normal coefficient of elasticity, or the reciprocal of Young's modulus
for quartz rod at room temperature, was measured first by Boys. This coefficient
is defined by
where Y is
Young's modulus and is the
normal stress. Emperically, ,
which is very near the most recently determined values for fibers from
50 to lOO microns in diameter. Young's modulus varies with the size of
the fiber, becoming greater as the size of the fiber diminishes. This
variation can be expressed by
where d is
the diameter of the fiber in microns. This relation fails to hold, giving
values too large, for fibers less than l0 microns in diameter. Experimental
values of Y for various sizes of fibers are given in Table II.
The increase in modulus of elasticity with decrease in size is due to
the importance of the surface layer for the smaller fibers, which has
a different elastic constant.
TABLE II
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The tangential coefficient
of elasticity, or the reciprocal of the rigidity modulus, for solid rod
of radius r and length 1, is defined as
where
, is the tangential stress and
is the angle of twist of the rod. For a uniform solid round rod ,
where L is the applied torque and r is the radius. Z
has a minimum value of but
depends, as does Y, on the size of the fiber, as shown in Table
II.
Two other elastic
quantities are very often useful. The first indicates how much a fiber
can be stretched before it breaks, that is,
where
is the normal stress for failure. Values of
for failure are given in Table II. These apply only to fresh, clean fibers
or those which have been kept perfectly clean and dry. (See below as to
how to preserve fibers.) As far as is known, no other material approaches
this factor. For the best nickel-vanadium steels the ratio is about 0.01.
A comparison of Young's modulus for each material shows that quartz fiber
compares favorably in strength with the strongest materials known.
The second quantity
indicates how much a fiber can be twisted without failure, that is,
for fibers up to
20 microns in diameter, where
is the tangential stress for failure. This ratio also increases as the
size of the fiber decreases. Thus, a fiber 5 microns in diameter can be
twisted through at least 20 revolutions per centimeter of length before
it fails. It should be remarked that the elastic limits for both normal
and tangential stresses are coincident with the point of failure.
Another property
of quartz which enhances its value for electrometer and other suspensions
is its low internal viscosity. If a fiber is twisted through an angle
, then the shearing stress
is not strictly a constant but depends on time, thus:
The coefficient
is a measure of the internal friction, or viscosity. Some representative
values are given in Table III.
TABLE
III
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If a fiber of length
l and radius r is allowed to oscillate in a vacuum with
a body of moment of inertia I suspended from the lower end, and
if T is the period and
the logarithmic decrement of the vibration, the coefficient of viscosity
in poises is given by
If such a torsion
pendulum has a period of 2 seconds, it will lose about 10 per cent of
its amplitude in 24 hours.
Thus
as defined above, should be as small as possible if the internal losses
are to be kept at a minimum.
Thermal-elastic
properties. Both Young's modulus and the rigidity modulus for fused
quartz depend on temperature. Each becomes greater with moderate increase
in temperature. Boys gives
the coefficient of Y is ,
and for Z it is the same. For very accurate work any instrument
using quartz fiber should be calibrated at more than one temperature.
Hardness.
Fused silica has a hardness of 7 on the 1 to 10 scale. It is thus harder
than glass and also harder than most of the metals.
Surface tension
of molten silica. If a fiber is heated until the quartz becomes quite
soft, it will tend either to shrink and enlarge at the point of heating
or to pull apart, depending on the tension. We may define the surface
tension as the force per unit of circumference tending to pull the fiber
together. This varies with the temperature, but an average value will
be 250 dynes . In comparison,
glass has a surface tension of 140 to 160 dynes .
Electrical properties.
When fused quartz is clean and dry, it is probably the best electrical
insulator known. For this reason it is useful in such apparatus as electroscopes
and electrometers, in which leakage must be reduced to a minimum. If used
in the open air, quartz covered with the wax known as ceresin is still
better than amber as an insulator. Care should be taken that the ceresin
is that distilled from the natural mineral and not the synthetic material
very often sold. When it is applied, the temperature of both the quartz
and the ceresin should be from 80 to 100 degrees C. for the first dip.
Thicker coatings can be applied by allowing the quartz to cool before
dipping again.
The absorption of
electrical charge, or "soak-in," is extremely low, being less than 10
per cent of that for amber.
The use of quartz
in the form of fibers
The remarkable property
of retaining and even increasing its strength as it is drawn into fine
fibers makes the number of applications of
quartz to fine instruments
many and varied. Few scientists, it seems, have realized and appreciated
its values. Stronger than any of the metals used for suspensions, with
the exception of tungsten, it has the advantage that it can be made according
to the specific requirements. Although some practice is necessary to acquire
the proper skill, its acquisition would seem eminently worth while, considering
the results that can be obtained.
Equipment useful
in making and working with quartz fibers
A description of
the torch burning natural gas and oxygen used by the author of this chapter
will be given. If other gases are used, it may be necessary to modify
the technique given below to meet the specific conditions.
Fig. 1. Large
and small torches for working fused quartz.
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The torch is made
from a piece of brass tubing bent into the shape shown in Fig. 1 and having
one end threaded for removable tips. The best size of opening for quartz
work is about 2 mm in diameter. Other sizes of tips from 1 to 3 mm in
diameter will be found useful. To produce the necessary long steady flame,
the length of the hole in the tip should be at least five times its diameter.
The oxygen and gas are mixed at some distance from the torch. An ordinary
T is sufficient for this mixing. It is necessary to have a ready
means of control for both the gas and the oxygen. If the latter is under
high pressure, a reduction valve in conjunction with a needle valve gives
the best regulation. A combination of needle valves and T which
has been found to give satisfactory service is shown in Fig. 2.
Fig.
2. Combination of needle valves and mixer
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In using such a torch,
care should be taken in lighting to turn the gas on first, light it, and
then gradually turn the oxygen on until the proper flame is produced.
To extinguish the flame, turn the oxygen off slowly and then the gas.
Disregard of this procedure may result in a backfire into the line but
usually does little damage except to sensitive nerves.
The described torch
is a useful adjunct to any laboratory, especially when supplied with tips
of various sizes. It is ideal for working Pyrex glass as well as quartz.
When quartz fibers are being made, the torch is held by a clamp so that
the flame is vertical.
Indispensable in
the working of small pieces of quartz is a small torch shown in Fig. 1,
identical with the larger one except for size, and using the same gases,
which are controlled by separate fine needle valves. The best metal tubing
for this torch is brass or copper 1/16 inch in internal diameter. The
gases are led from the mixer to the torch by 1/16-inch rubber tubing.
Small volumes throughout are important, or much time will be wasted in
waiting for a change of gas mixture to arrive at the tip. The tips should
be interchangeable and should have openings of from 0.05 to 0.2 mm in
diameter. A slight modification of design (illustrated) permits the torch
to be mounted and manipulated by mechanical means. The usefulness of this
small torch will become apparent later.
In measuring the
sizes of fibers, an ordinary microscope equipped with a scale in the eyepiece
and having a magnification of from 300 to 1000 is very useful. With some
experience the sizes of fibers can be judged to within 20 to 50 per cent
by the amount of scattered light, the way they weave in the air, and so
forth, but in many cases the diameter is important, and an accurate means
of determining their size is invaluable.
After blowing out
a fine fiber, two places are marked, and the position of the intervening
portion is thus determined by small tabs. Dennison's No. 251 tabs are
recommended.
Fig. 3. A simple
fork used for holding fibers while they are being mounted
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In many instances
one works with fibers from a few centimeters to 10 or even 20 cm in length.
In these cases 3. the fibers are mounted on a two-pronged fork. This is
| easily made as shown in the sketch, Fig. 3. The end of each prong is
drilled, and a piece of quartz (50 microns to 150 microns) is put in with
hard wax. The reason for the quartz tip is to allow some freedom to the
fiber, since the quartz tips will bend if the fiber is pulled one way
or the other. Rigid supports result in many more broken fibers. The fiber
is fastened to the tips with a small piece of hard wax.
In cases in which
one fiber is melted to another, each will shrink, and the quartz will
gather at the junction. It is necessary then to have two forks, each with
movable prongs. The fork designed according to Fig. 4 has proved very
satisfactory. If the handles are attached at different angles, the two
forks can be worked together more easily.
Fig.
4. Adjustable prong fork
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A hot wire mounted
as in Fig. 5 has many uses and is especially valuable in melting small
pieces of wax. The resistance wire can be any one of several, such as
platinum, German silver, Chromel, Nichrome, and so forth. It should be
24-26 B and S gauge. A toy transformer with variable voltage of from 1
to 6 volts is convenient for controlling the temperature. A foot switch
is very useful, since both hands may be occupied when the heat is wanted.
In testing for conductivity
of quartz fibers which have coating of metal, a probe (see Fig. 6) with
a fine platinum wire tip finds a use. For such testing high voltages should
not be used, since the resulting sparking will remove the metal from the
fiber around the point of contact. Several volts applied through a 100,000-ohm
resistance and a low-sensitivity galvanometer will be found satisfactory
for qualitative work.
Waxes are indispensable
in fastening fibers either temporarily or permanently. For general use
Dennison's hard red wax, DeKhotinsky wax, or flake shellac is recommended.
If the wax is holding in place two or more fibers which are to have a
metal evaporated or sputtered onto them, one of the latter two waxes should
be used and heated until polymerization takes place, resulting in a material
either difficult or impossible to melt. Otherwise the heat developed during
the process of depositing the metal may cause the wax to soften and the
fibers to be displaced.
Fig. 5. Hot-wire
holder
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In case it is necessary
to hold a fiber temporarily and to maintain its desirable qualities, a
wax must be used which, when heated, will completely disappear and not
react in any way with the quartz. None of the products sold as waxes serve
the purpose. An organic chemical which has the desired properties is diphenylcarbazide.
It usually comes in powdered form and should be as pure as possible and
especially free from inorganic materials.
In handling small
pieces of wax, holding fibers, bending quartz fibers; and so forth, a
piece of quartz lOO microns in diameter and 2 to 3 cm long, waxed into
the end of a metal rod, is very useful (See Fig. 7.) It will also be found
that a needle mounted in the end of a metal rod has many uses. It is recommended
that several such quartz and needle holders be available.
Fig.
6. Platinum probe for testing conductivity of metal-covered fibers
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When working with
small objects, tweezers of various sizes are very convenient. These can
be obtained from jeweler's supply houses or from most houses supplying
scientific apparatus. For very fine work, watch-hairspring tweezers such
as #3C made by Dumont & Fils, Switzerland, are recommended. Also valuable
in cutting fibers are small scissors. These may be a good grade of manicure
scissors or dissecting scissors used in biological work. A nick should
be made in one blade to prevent large fibers from slipping. If the
scissors are guided
by mechanical means, small fibers (up to 40 mictons) can be cut off as
little as 0.01 mm at a time under a microscope.
Fig. 7. Various
instruments useful in fiber work
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In most fiber work
it is necessary to fix the position of the fiber with some accuracy. Small
tripods with adjustable feet, together with clamps and rods, as shown
in Fig. 8, will serve to hold the various forks, needles, and so forth,
used in the process of mounting the fibers. It is very difficult to hold
a fiber still enough by hand, and it is always best to take advantage
of mechanical devices wherever possible.
Very small fibers
(1 micron and less) can be easily seen by scattered light against a black
background. Black velvet is one of the best. If the diameter of a fiber
is to be measured under the microscope, a light background is needed;
the scattered light against black gives a false impression of the size,
since the actual outlines of the object cannot be seen.
Fig.
8. Support for holding work or fixing the position of fibers
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To put a conducting
coat of metal on quartz, any one, of several methods can be used. The
simplest, and one which is satisfactory for fibers down to 20 microns
in diameter, is to bake the metal on, using any of the good china paints.
Most of the noble metals—for example, platinum, gold, iridium, and
so forth—can be obtained in this form. The paint is-made by dissolving
one of the metal salts in an organic liquid. China painters use this on
their dishes and fire them to 700 degrees C. The organic material disappears,
and the metal compound decomposes, leaving behind a uniform coating of
the metal. The thickness for each coat may vary from 0.05 microns to 0.15
microns , depending on the thickness of the original paint. Very adherent,
electrically conducting coatings can be applied to glazed p8arcelain,
glass, quartz, and so forth. The hot wire, held under small pieces of
quartz fibers covered with these solutions, will bake them in a few seconds.
If an attempt is made to treat small fibers in this way, it will be found
that the solution collects into small drops along the fiber, and a disconnected
coating results when it is baked.
Sputtering or evaporating
the metal on are the most satisfactory methods and have the advantage
that conducting coats can be applied to fibers of any size. In general
it is desirable to arrange to coat the fibers on all sides. Evaporation
is the easier and simpler of the two methods. A suitable apparatus for
this is shown in Fig. 9.
Fig. 9. This
arrangement allows the evaporated metal to be deposited on all sides
of the work
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In working quartz
it is absolutely necessary to use dark glasses to protect the eyes. Besides
the brilliant glow, which in itself is bad for the eyes, the light is
very rich in ultraviolet, which is especially harmful and may cause blindness
through long exposure. The glasses should be gray in color, preferably,
and have a transmission of from 10 to 20 per cent. Ordinary glass will
cut out the ultraviolet, so that inexpensive dark glasses will suffice.
The writer has used
for some time a set of three micromanipulators. Each has a three-jointed
arm, which allows complete freedom in determining the position of the
fiber. For fine adjustment, micrometer screws with divided heads give
accurate motion in three mutually perpendicular directions. The accompanying
illustration, Fig. 10, shows one of the three manipulators.
Fig. 10.
Micromanipulator
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Although much of
the simpler fiber work can be done with the unaided eye or with a magnifying
glass, for fine work in which accuracy is important and ease of working
is desired a binocular microscope with a magnification of 15 to 20 can
be strongly recommended. Such a microscope not only gives stereoscopic
vision but when used properly results in little, if any, eyestrain. A
scale in one eyepiece allows measurements to be made. Lighting from several
directions is desirable to provide proper illumination on the work in
all positions.
A complete setup
of the major equipment used by the writer in quartz fiber work is illustrated
in Fig. 11 The black glass base permits the fine fiber to be seen easily
by scattered light. When the actual outlines of large fibers are to be
seen, a piece of white paper is placed on the glass base and used as a
background.
Making fibers.
A convenient size of stock quartz rod is 3 to 4 mm in diameter. Smaller
rod than this is apt to break when the larger fibers are being drawn and
is not easily held in the hands. Larger rod becomes more difficult to
melt.
Fig. 11. Complete
assembly for working quartz fibers
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The first step in
making a fine fiber is to draw one from 50 to 100 microns in diameter.
(See Fig. 12.) Two pieces of stock quartz of convenient length are held
in the hands. The oxygen-gas flame is adjusted to maximum heat; that is,
both the oxygen and gas are increased, especially the oxygen, until a
hissing flame results, and the small cone just over the opening in the
torch tip has shortened until its height is perhaps two or three times
its width. The hottest portion of the flame is just above this small cone.
The ends of the quartz rod are melted together and then pulled apart a
short distance, so that the connecting soft quartz is perhaps 1 mm in
diameter. This portion, when held in the hottest part of the flame, will
become quite soft. The quartz rods are then quickly removed from the flame,
and at the same time the two pieces held in the hands are separated rapidly
to a distance of several feet. The hotter the narrow section of quartz
and the faster the drawing, the smaller will be the resulting fiber. Fibers
down to 20 microns can be drawn in this manner.
Fig.
12. The first step in making a small fiber is to draw a larger one.
A very hot flame is used
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To make a smaller
fiber from the larger one, the procedure is as follows: Break the connecting
fiber produced in the above drawing process so that a section of 8 to
10 inches is left on each piece of quartz stock. This section should be
stiff enough to support itself in a vertical position. Now adjust the
flame by turning the oxygen partially off, so that a steady flame about
15 to 20 inches long is produced. The cone above the tip will lengthen
to several inches Holding the quartz stock so that the attached fiber
is vertical, move it into the vertical flame as illustrated in Fig. 13.
The whole length of the fiber will glow uniformly. If the temperature
of the flame and the size of the fiber are right, the fiber will gradually
begin to lengthen, slowly at first and then more rapidly as it becomes
smaller. Finally, the upper section of the original fiber will go quickly
toward the ceiling. As soon as this happens, the lower end should be removed
~ from the flame. A careful examination will reveal a fine 31 fiber joining
the two ends of the original, perhaps 3 to 6 feet long. Sections of it
can be seen in scattered light. Place a small tab on one part of the fine
fiber with one hand while holding the stock quartz (to which the other
end of the fiber is attached) in the other. The position of the intervening
portion is now determined, so that other tabs can be stuck on and suitable
lengths removed. Each end of each length will thus have a small tab attached.
These fibers are then stored in a clean container in which the air is
kept dry. (See figure 14.)
Fig. 13. The
second step in making a small fiber is to blow out the large fiber
by holding it in a long, vertical, relatively cool flame
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The size of the resulting
small fiber will depend on a number of factors. Chief among these are
the size of the original fiber, the temperature and size of the flame,
and the time intervening between the disappearance of the top of the original
fiber and the removal of the lower end. Some practice is necessary to
secure fibers of a desired size. It will be found that fibers produced
in the above manner are straight and of quite uniform diameter for some
distance on each side of the center.
A few cautions are
necessary if good fibers are to be had. The basis of all of these is cleanliness.
Much of the dust on objects around a laboratory and floating in the air
is inorganic. If a fiber is heated where a piece of dust has settled,
the metallic salts form silicates and in general completely spoil the
surface, and for that reason the fiber also, at the point of contact.
It is a general rule that no part of a fiber which ultimately is to have
any stress applied should ever touch anything except those materials which
are softer than the quartz and will not react with it. This may seem to
be a stringent requirement, but in reality the fiber can always be handled
by its ends, which are eventually discarded.
If the original large
fiber shows any bright spots when put into the flame, it should be discarded.
In general, this is the best test for dust that can be applied. Dust will
immediately show itself by causing a bright spot, and the fiber can be
discarded forthwith; if there is no dust on the fiber, it will not be
harmed by heating. This test can be made with fibers from 10 to l00 microns
with an ordinary Bunsen burner. For smaller ones the small torch using
a pure gas flame should be used. In each case the fiber should be under
some tension to keep it straight.
If the size of the
fiber is to be measured with the microscope, it is usually sufficient
to take a sample from each end and take the mean diameter. The sample
is placed on a piece of glass, which in turn is placed on the microscope
stage and viewed by transmitted light. To find the fiber in' the microscope
the following procedure is valuable in saving time: Have plenty of light
passing through the optical system. Raise the objective until it is several
times the working distance from the object. Remove the ocular. Move the
glass on which the fiber is lying until, by looking down the microscope
tube, the reduced image of the fiber is seen. Adjust the position of the
fiber until its image appears approximately in the middle of the objective.
Now move' the objective down until the image begins to spread. When it
appears to cover the objective completely, the object is near the focus,
and on replacing the ocular, the image should be in the field of view.
After working with
fibers for a while, one can judge their size by the amount of scattered
light, the amount of weaving in the air, how much a fiber of a given length
sags under its own weight, the radius of curvature when hung over a needle
with a tab on one end, and so forth. These methods are good to from 20
to 50 per cent, except for fibers below 1 to 2 microns.
Another method for
drawing fibers has been described by Boys.
It consists in pulling the two pieces of quartz apart very rapidly by
means of a projected arrow. Long fibers down to 10 microns of very uniform
diameter can be produced in this fashion. The hotter the quartz and the
faster the arrow is shot the finer will be the fiber.
Fig.
14. Preserving quartz fibers
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The care and preservation
of small fibers. When
a fiber has its two ends marked with tabs, it should be hung in a clean,
dry container. A crosspiece at the top of the container, on which are
small pieces of soft wax or beeswax, serves as a hanger. The top tab is
pressed into the wax, and the lower tab keeps the fiber from weaving around
and touching things.
The container should
be 10 to 12 inches deep, airtight, and preferably made from glass. It
should be clean and contain a good drying agent either phosphorous pentoxide
or anhydrous potassium hydroxide. A convenient container is made from
an inverted bell jar with a plate-. glass top as shown in Fig. 14. Fibers
deteriorate in moist atmospheres, but can be preserved for months with
no change in breaking strength if kept clean and dry.
Some useful techniques
in fiber work. Straightening. Fibers
from 10 to 500 microns can be quickly and easily straightened by hanging
a weight on the lower end and running a Bunsen burner flame up and down
the piece several times The weight should be somewhat less than that necessary
to elongate the fiber appreciably under the heat of the flame. A small
Dennison tab is sufficient for fibers 10 to 50 micron and a 2-inch tab
for those between 50 and 500 microns. For fibers from 4 to 10 microns
a small Dennison tab should be cut in two and the small torch burning
pure gas used for heat.
Bending. Fibers
from 40 microns on up are best bent by hanging a weight such as a tab
at one end, holding the fiber at the proper angle, and applying the heat
locally with a small torch burning oxygen and gas. The piece between the
flame and the tab will fall to a vertical position as shown in Fig. 15.
Fig. 15. Bending
large and small fibers
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Fibers between 1
and 40 microns are best bent over another piece of quartz. A weight such
as part or all of a small tab or a small piece of wax bends the fiber
over the larger piece of quartz (100 microns or less). A pure gas flame
applied with the small torch at the contact of the two fibers will bend
the smaller one over the larger. The flame should not be applied longer
than is necessary, or the two pieces of quartz are apt to stick together.
Drawing and shrinking.
If one end of a fiber is attached to a screw-controlled sliding mechanism,
such as the movable prong fork described earlier, a portion of it may
be readily drawn down to any desired size by applying a flame with the
small torch and gradually screwing out one prong.
Fig.
16. Shrinking a small fiber
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Soft quartz has a
high surface tension, and fibers tend to shrink when heated. The heating
is done with the small torch. It is necessary to have a properly adjusted
flame. A compromise must be made between a hot flame with swiftly rushing
gases, which readily melts and blows the fibers apart, and a cooler flame,
which will not soften the quartz sufficiently. The ideal is reached when
the tendency to blow away is overcome by the tendency to pull together
due to surface tension. The fiber is heated in a slackened condition,
and as the shrinkage proceeds it is fed by the movable prongs. A torch
tip with a hole about 0.1 mm in diameter is perhaps the best. With some
practice a fiber may be locally enlarged to many times its previous diameter.
(See Fig. 16.)
Joining one fiber
to another. When the above technique has been learned, the joining
of two fibers crossing one another becomes simple. Each shrinks to the
common junction, forming a joint which is stronger than any other portion.
For this work it is necessary to use two of the forks with movable prongs,
gradually feeding in the quartz as the joint grows 1n size.
Joining a fiber
to a larger piece of quartz. If the larger piece is too large to melt
locally with the small torch, a "teat" is put on at the proper place with
a larger torch and then drawn down to a fine point. The fiber, mounted
on the fork, is placed next to this teat, and heat is applied to the teat.
Upon softening, the larger piece of quartz draws the small fiber in by
surface tension. Straightening of the fiber near the junction is done
by heating with the small torch burning pure gas when the fiber is under
a slight tension.
With care, fibers
as small as 1micron in diameter can be melted to other fibers or larger
pieces of quartz.
Fig. 17. Making
a flat fiber.
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Drawing an oval
fiber. The tip of each piece of the stock quartz is heated in the
oxygen-gas flame so that only the very end becomes soft. With the axes
of the two pieces held parallel, the ends are brought together and immediately
separated at right angles to the axes of the stock quartz, and at the
same time they are removed from the flame. (See Fig. 17.) Only flat fibers
larger than 30 to 40 microns can be produced in this fashion. They are
useful in vibration types of pressure gauges in which the motion is to
be limited to one plane.
Drawing fat tubing.
In some cases quartz is useful in making the Bourdon type of pressure
gauge. If a long piece of flat tubing is made into a spiral and a mirror
and scale are used to measure the change in angle, such a gauge becomes
an accurate means of measuring moderate pressures. One way to produce
long pieces of elliptically shaped thin-walled tubing is to use two large
torches as cross-fires and to heat 1/ 2- to 3/4-inch quartz tubing without
rotation. Heating should continue until the walls nearest the flame are
quite soft. The tubing is removed from the flame and rapidly pulled to
3 or 4 feet. If heating has not been sufficient, the elongated occluded
bubbles will cause the resultant tubing to be brittle. It is, in fact,
a good procedure to work the heated section by alternately enlarging and
contracting it with internal pressure before drawing. The oval tubing
is bent into the desired shape with a moderately hot flame.
Fig.
18. Design of quartz fiber support used in the Dolezalek and Compton
electrometers. The whole is made from fused quartz, upon which is
deposited a coating of metal, for example, gold or platinum.
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Making electrometer
suspensions. Quartz fibers make ideal e suspensions for electrometers.
The most satisfactory way of making the suspensions consists in joining
the ends of the fiber to two larger pieces of quartz by melting them together
with a small torch. In many cases these larger pieces are bent into small
hooks, and then the whole is made conducting by evaporating or sputtering
gold or some other metal on it as represented in Fig. 18. In cases in
which hooks cannot be used, the larger quartz is left straight and is
cemented into place with a hard wax such as DeKhotinsky's. Contact is
made by attaching a fine wire to the quartz with hard wax before the fiber
is coated with the metal. The wire is later soldered to the metal pieces
of the electrometer.
The method of soldering
the metal-coated fibers does not produce a suspension as permanent as
with the methods described above. The gold is apt to amalgamate with the
solder and result in a poor contact between the main portion of the fiber
and the solder.
Another method of
fastening fibers to metal parts and at the same time making an electrical
contact is to use colloidal graphite. A small drop is placed at the proper
point, and in a short while the water will evaporate, leaving a strong
conducting joint.
Quartz is very convenient
for making various types of electroscopes. It is not only good for the
moving parts but is used uncoated for insulation.
Mounting cross
hairs in optical instruments. Fibers made from quartz surpass any
other material for cross hairs. Owing to the refraction of the light by
the fiber, it appears black as seen in a bright field. Its essential smoothness,
freedom from dust, uniformity of size, straightness, and the fact that
it can be drawn to any desired diameter make it especially valuable.
Fig. 19. Steps
in mounting cross hairs for microscope and telescope eyepieces
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The mounting is first
prepared by melting hard wax onto it at the desired points. The fiber
is mounted on a fork and lowered into position. A hot wire brought near
the wax where the stretched fiber rests will allow the fiber to sink in
and become firmly attached. The various steps are illustrated in Fig.
19.
Torsion balance.
For objects weighing less than 1 mg the torsion balance becomes very useful.
It is not difficult to make a balance having a sensitivity of
to g/div. without the use
of mirrors or microscopes. A simple calculation will show the size of
fiber necessary for the specific requirements. The crossarm should be
statically balanced. The amount of twist of the fiber is conveniently
read from a divided head.
The balance may be
calibrated by weighing on an analytical balance a long section of fine
wire such as 40 B and S gauge copper, 2-mil nickel, or smaller if needed,
and cutting from this piece samples of a given length. Usually ten samples
will give a probable error of less than 1 per cent in the calibration.
If the tension in the torsion fiber is kept constant with a quartz bow,
it can be assumed with much accuracy that the twist is proportional to
the weight. Since is the
surface strain, where r is the radius of the torsion fiber,
the angle of twist in radians, and l the length twisted, and since
the maximum value of this is about 0.05, the maximum load which the balance
can handle is easily computed. A simple design of such a torsion balance
is shown in Fig. 20.
Fig.
20. Simple design of a quatrz microbalance
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If all the joints
are made of fused quartz there need be no fear of a changing "zero," since
the limit of elasticity coincides with the breaking point.
Other uses of
quartz. Quartz rod or fiber is often used as a carrier of light—visible,
ultraviolet, or infrared. Internal reflections keep the light inside the
quartz and permit it to be led around corners, provided the corners are
not too sharp.
In many cases in
which accuracy in maintaining shape or position is important, quartz finds
a use. All metals change their dimensions with time, especially when under
strain. This change can be lessened by thorough annealing, which consists
in subjecting the metal alternately to temperatures above and below room
temperature. In extreme cases this treatment may take days or weeks. Annealed
fused quartz does not suffer from changes in dimensions, since the flow
under strain is less than 10-3 of that for metals.
Fused quartz is finding
increasing uses in lamps of various kinds in which the transmission of
ultraviolet light is important. For the same reason many photoelectric
cells are made from quartz.
Although the above
does not pretend to be an exhaustive list of the uses to which fused silica
can be put, it is hoped that the reader will gain some idea of the usefulness
of this material.
Fused
quartz is obtainable from the Thermal Syndicate and the General Electric
Company. Each carries a large stock of quartz products and will make special
pieces on demand.
Boy's, C.V., Roy. Soc. Phil. Trans., 143, 159 (1889).
Kaye,
G.W.C., Phil. Mag., 20, 718 (1910).
For
a discussion of the behavior of metals and quartz used as standards of
length the reader to Glazebrook, Sir Richard Tetley, editor, Dictionary
of Applied Physics, Volume III, pages 471-475. New York: The Macillan
Company, 1922-1923.
Honda, K., Phil. Mag., 42, 115 (1921).
Glazebrook, Sir Richard Tetley, editor, Dictionary of Applied Physics,
Volume III, page 699. New York: The Macillan Company, 1922-1923.
Ibid.,
Volume
III, page 696.
See
"Electrometers and Electroscopes." |