I just tried this yesterday with my younger daughter using a microwave (USD 60) I got for the purpose. Amazingly, the microwave oven isn't broken yet,
and has produced things that'll glow. We used 1% (w/w) Cr₂O₃ in aluminum oxide. Because I was already at a pottery supply place getting the
materials, I also got a couple of refractory plates, one for the bottom, a smaller one for the top, and a clay bit with a hole in it to use as a
crucible.
We didn't have aluminum wool, so we tried copper, which didn't work right away, and parts cut from a steel scrubber (more flat coils than thin
fibers). To everybody's delight, we got things that glowed under UV light, and are working up to making bigger ones.
I saw that program in Japanese on making way bigger bits of corundum in the microwave, but it was very light on details. Are there written ones
somewhere else, ideally in English?
[Edited on 2023/10/16 by davidfetter][/rquote]
I haven't tried the Japanese process yet, but I'm about to.Do you have any pictures of the experiment?If you use copper or steel to start the
reaction, I'm worried that you might contaminate the rubies.Have you observed anything like this?Higher concentrations of iron in the crystal lattice
of ruby interfere with its luminescence. I have tried tungsten and molybdenum.Its oxides promote ruby crystallization,but the arc did not
ignite,probably because the energy required to create a plasma from these materials exceeds that available in a microwave oven.The solution would
probably be to coat Mo or W with a layer of graphite or aluminum. |