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  2. Glass coloring and color marking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass_coloring_and_color...

    The color is caused by the size and dispersion of gold particles. Ruby gold glass is usually made of lead glass with added tin. Silver compounds such as silver nitrate and silver halides can produce a range of colors from orange-red to yellow. The way the glass is heated and cooled can significantly affect the colors produced by these compounds.

  3. Cranberry glass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cranberry_glass

    Vintage cranberry glass bowl The beaker with lid made from Gold Ruby is attributed to Johann Kunckel. Cranberry glass or ' Gold Ruby ' glass is a red glass made by adding gold salts or colloidal gold to molten glass. Tin, in the form of stannous chloride, is sometimes added in tiny amounts as a reducing agent. The glass is used primarily in ...

  4. Colloidal gold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colloidal_gold

    This cranberry glass bowl was made by adding a gold salt (probably gold chloride) to molten glass. Used since ancient times as a method of staining glass, colloidal gold was used in the 4th-century Lycurgus Cup, which changes color depending on the location of light source. [12] [13]

  5. Sodium silicate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sodium_silicate

    The terms "water glass" and "soluble glass" were used by Leopold Wolff in 1846, [9] by Émile Kopp in 1857, [10] and by Hermann Krätzer in 1887. [11] In 1892, Rudolf Von Wagner distinguished soda, potash, double (soda and potash), and fixing (i.e., stabilizing) as types of water glass. The fixing type was "a mixture of silica well saturated ...

  6. Salt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt

    Shows a typical salt shaker and salt bowl with salt spread before each on a black background. Salt is essential to the health of humans and other animals, and it is one of the five basic taste sensations. [34] Salt is used in many cuisines, and it is often found in salt shakers on diners' eating tables for their personal use on food. Salt is ...

  7. Why salt melts ice — and how to use it on your sidewalk - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/chemists-told-us-why-salt...

    Similarly, to get an improved salt surface area, use smaller salt. “If you have two 1-pound bags of salt, but one bag has big crystals and the other has small crystals, the smaller crystals will ...

  8. When salt was gold: The evolution of two commodities

    www.aol.com/salt-gold-evolution-two-commodities...

    An ounce of salt could once be traded for an ounce of gold. Now, the idea is laughable, with the cost of gold reaching over $2,000 per ounce while 26 ounces of salt is valued at just $1.

  9. Glass casting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass_casting

    A bowl made from cast-glass. The two halves are joined together by the weld seam, running down the middle. Glass casting is the process in which glass objects are cast by directing molten glass into a mould where it solidifies. The technique has been used since the 15th century BCE in both Ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia. Modern cast glass is ...