Throughout my years of collecting chemistry glassware I've ocassionally seen lines similar to, but not quite the same as, a crack. The lines are
typically perfectly straight and very narrow. They resemble a scratch more than a crack (I.e. they are whitish) and have a shape resembling a very
elongated, strechted-out grain of rice (do not appear to be air bubbles - too opaque). The lines usually cannot be felt with a finger, so are likely
internal.
Here's the part where you may say "ahah!" - strangely, they only seem to appear on wide, cylidrical expanses of glass and always running vertical on a
sidewall (that is vertical on, say, a beaker that is siting on it's bottom). For instance, Ive noticed them on jacketed glassware, glass buchner
funnels, sox extractors, beakers, etc. - anything cylindrical. And I believe I've seen them only on the clear glass, never the joints. I've also
seen marks that appear to be the same on quartz tubing.
Does anyone know what the term for these is so I may have starting point to dig up some hazard information on them? I'm thinking they may be some
type of glass stress, but they should have a name based on the frequency that I've observed them.
I've never been concerned until I saw one on Pyrex beaker I plan to use. Here, heat may be an issue.
BTW - I've even seen one these imperfections on a unopened box piece of Ace glassware, so it's not an issue of cleaning or usage.
Thanks! |