Page:Experimental researches in chemistry and.djvu/255

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
240
On the Manufacture of Optical Glass.
[1829.

9. Whilst the crucible is in the condition described, it is clear that all those circumstances, as currents, bubbles, &c., which tend to mix the glass, form abundant striæ and veins of enormous strength, and do harm unless they are continued in activity until the mixture is nearly complete; a state rarely, if ever, acquired in the ordinary flint glass pot. But even if this could be the case, there is a constant cause of deterioration arising from the highly fluxing and dissolving quality given to the glass by the oxide of lead. In this respect, flint glass far surpasses crown or plate glass, and it is also during one stage of its preparation more fluid: it consequently is continually exerting a solvent power upon the crucible to a considerable extent, occasioning that very irregularity in composition which produces striae, whilst the comparative levity of the matter dissolved at the sides and bottom, and the ascending currents at the hottest parts of the crucible, are constantly mixing this deteriorating portion with the general mass.

10. The difficulties which are thus introduced into the manufacture of flint glass fit for optical uses appeared to the committee, who, however, were none of them practical glass-makers, to increase, as the scale upon which the inquiries were carried on diminished: and the enormous expense of large experiments, —the time required for each,—the number necessary to give that experience which should render any one who undertook the charge of this part of the inquiry an ordinary practical workman, —and the uselessness of the resulting glass for any other purpose than the one directly contemplated,—compelled the sub-committee to consider seriously on the possibility of making other glasses than those ordinarily in use, which, at the same time that they had the high dispersive power enabling them to replace flint glass, might have also such fusibility as would allow of their being perfectly stirred and mixed, and might be retained, without alteration, in such vessels as could be procured of any desired size.

11. The borate of lead, and the borate of lead with silica, were the substances which, after some trials, were found to offer such reasonable hopes of success as to justify perseverance in a series of experiments; and the metal platina was looked to as the material out of which to form the vessels intended to be used. It was soon ascertained that the borate of lead could