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JJay
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Custom Quartz Glassware on eBay?
I noticed that this new seller claims to be selling custom quartz glass on eBay: http://www.ebay.com/itm/500ml-3-neck-three-neck-round-bottom...
If I were to take a guess based on the price of the one item available for sale, I'd think that the prices are probably not bad for quartz labware. I
don't see much feedback yet, though... research suggests that this might be a new storefront for Donghai Yukang Quartz Material, which has been in
business for at least a few years, but I'm not 100% sure... I know I sure would like to buy some Chinese quartz directly from the manufacturer....
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Sulaiman
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It occurs to me that just adding a quartz flask to a borosilicate kit could be a disaster,
Borosilicate male joints would expand more than quartz female joints,
Resulting in cracks or frozen joints.
Just thought I'd mention it in case someone tries.
CAUTION : Hobby Chemist, not Professional or even Amateur
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JJay
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If you are buying quartz glass, you should probably know that already. Some manufacturers make transition pieces that have a quartz-to-borosilicate
transition if you want to put both quartz and borosilicate glassware in the same apparatus. Although as long as you aren't exposing the borosilicate
glass to high temperatures, it isn't usually a problem (look at the difference in the coefficients of expansion of PTFE and borosilicate glass and
you'll see what I mean).
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macckone
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PTFE tends to be able to bend/compress/stretch which glass cannot.
That is why PTFE works well with glass. PTFE is 'plastic' in the
physical sense so it does not break glass which is 'brittle'.
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JJay
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I'm not sure what gives you the idea that PTFE doesn't break glass; I've personally seen glass with a PTFE stir bearing in it break when heated, and
the break did not occur at the point of the most stress; the break occurred at the bearing. The differences in the coefficients of expansion are far
greater for PTFE and borosilicate than borosilicate and quartz. PTFE is preferred over glass in labware mainly only in situations where there is
concern that the joint might get frozen if all-glass construction is used.
I was told by a quartz labware salesperson that quartz-to-borosilicate transitions aren't usually necessary as long as the borosilicate male
connectors are out of the "hot zone"--although they are more than willing to provide quartz stoppers and transition pieces.
While it is true that this falls short of a calculation of the appropriate modulus and the necessary deformation by temperature as well as the
compressive force, I haven't ever personally taken a statics class, so I'm a little reluctant to offer up those calculations myself. I do point out,
though, that the compressive moduluses of PTFE, quartz, and borosilicate glass are similar. As anyone who has handled a window pane (or fiberglass)
knows, glass does bend. And as anyone who has handled PTFE stock knows, PTFE is extremely rigid.
[Edited on 8-5-2017 by JJay]
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JJay
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I'm currently in negotiations with the seller and am going to try to get some quartz distillation flasks listed. They have vanilla ones ready for
purchase. I personally want one with a ground quartz stopper and an N24 male joint.
Oh and research confirms that this is straight from the manufacturer, Donghai Yukang Quartz Material.
[Edited on 8-5-2017 by JJay]
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Sulaiman
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I would like quartz glassware ... who would not ?
If I had spare cash I'd have everything in quartz
but in quartz I would at least want a flask and something like a Claisen-Vigreaux adapter
or a 90 degree adapter and combustion tube etc.
I guess an absolute minimum would be flask + Claisen or flask + (air condenser/Hempel column,
allowing the quartz-borosilicate joints to be cooler than the flask.
... and stainless steel Keck clips.
Why do you want a male joint on the flask ?
. more likely to have liquid leakage
. the compression of the joint when hot (gravity, clip) would mean breakage on cooling rather than heating
I'm not being awkward for the sake of it,
I guess what I mean is,
don't be seduced by the beauty of quartz before you have a complete plan
CAUTION : Hobby Chemist, not Professional or even Amateur
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JJay
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A column is undesirable for distilling sulfuric acid or most other things you'd want to distill in quartz (such as aluminum bromide, for example). The
Snyder Claisen adapter you have pictured would be outrageously expensive. I'm not sure what you would use it for either... fractionating
mercury-gallium mixtures??
If a break does occur at the male joint (unlikely), it will be the $11 borosilicate adapter breaking, not the $$$ quartz flask.
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LD5050
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what are the advantages of quartz im curious? is quartz a lot better than borosillicate?
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JJay
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You can heat quartz to red hot and then quench it in ice water without any breakage. I've done it. It has a higher working temperature too.
I personally would not buy a quartz 3-neck flask unless I planned on having an all quartz setup, but quartz test tubes and retorts definitely have
their uses.
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Funkerman23
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I'm glad I am not the only one who noticed that ebay seller. JJay: what kind of flask ,specifically, are you referring to? A long single neck flask
might be helpful for sulfuric, but if you have an image of what you are negotiating for, I would be very grateful. I've had a Hell of a time finding
a cost effective way to get to 400C...
" the Modern Chemist is inundated with literature"-Unknown
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Funkerman23
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I'm glad I am not the only one who noticed that ebay seller. JJay: what kind of flask ,specifically, are you referring to? A long single neck flask
might be helpful for sulfuric, but if you have an image of what you are negotiating for, I would be very grateful. I've had a Hell of a time finding
a cost effective way to get to 400C...
" the Modern Chemist is inundated with literature"-Unknown
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JJay
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They carry these as a stock item:
What I want is something like this:
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JJay
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The differences in expansion for an N24 joint (if I'm calculating this correctly) are just under 1/1000 of an inch over a 300 C temperature change for
quartz and borosilicate glass. I'm pretty sure that if a borosilicate female joint can withstand being heated to 200 C and then plunged into ice
water, it should be able to interface directly with a quartz male joint at 325 C (if not, the transition adapters aren't that outrageously expensive).
Something like this could be used for distilling sulfuric acid, sodium, potassium, aluminum bromide, mercury, phosphorus, bibenzyl, bitumen,
hexadecanol, etc. over a flame (or in a 1000 C furnace), with an inert atmosphere if necessary.
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JJay
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Well, I just ordered a custom quartz distillation flask with ground quartz joints. I specified that the distillation arm be only 30mm above the bulb.
I am super stoked about this.
[Edited on 18-5-2017 by JJay]
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JJay
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I heard from the seller today, and my quartz distillation flask is ready. My plan is to wrap a copper coil around the side arm and connect it to a
regular condenser. I can heat the bulb over a flame or perhaps build a furnace.
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JJay
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I tried out my new flask yesterday, distilling some sulfuric acid. My initial attempts at wrapping copper tubing failed (will try again with packed
copper tubing), so I simply connected a 24/40 borosilicate Vigreux column as condenser without any special cooling. It worked well without any damage
and was easy to remove with a blowtorch following the distillation.
You can buy a flask just like it here: http://www.ebay.com/itm/500ml-Customized-Quartz-Distilling-F...
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Morgan
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Not on eBay but kind of nice little bottles.
https://image.ec21.com/image/highborn11/oimg_GC03655044_CA07...
http://image.made-in-china.com/2f0j00bKYTQLVtshoy/Quartz-Bot...
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Loptr
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Quote: Originally posted by JJay | I heard from the seller today, and my quartz distillation flask is ready. My plan is to wrap a copper coil around the side arm and connect it to a
regular condenser. I can heat the bulb over a flame or perhaps build a furnace.
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And here I am 5 years later ordering a 1L quartz distillation flask with 24/40 joints from Donghai Yukang Quartz Material.
The cost is extremely good compared to a few other USA-based quartz manufacturers.
Would anyone else be interested in purchasing one as well?
[Edited on 30-9-2022 by Loptr]
"Question everything generally thought to be obvious." - Dieter Rams
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Dr.Bob
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Another source for quartz is prism glass, located here in NC, just a few miles away. They are much smaller now than before, but they have
specialized equipment for quartz work, and might be less pricey now that they are smaller, but I don't know. They made some UV transparent glassware
for me many years back, and did a great job. Doubt they can complete with Chinese cost, but shipping might be less, and likely much faster.
www.prismresearchglass.com
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pneumatician
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The ebay links don't work...
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Mateo_swe
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Because they are very old, items on ebay are not forever.
Unless its a very established company selling on ebay, they usually have their shops for longer times.
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Loptr
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Yes, the seller no longer seems to be on ebay--almost as though they forgot they had that account. They seem to have taken it down after I contacted
them.
I have sent them the funds for the new quartz flask. Now its the waiting game.
I will post back once I have more to share. The price was a lot better than other quartz glassware manufacturers I had spoken with recently.
[Edited on 11-10-2022 by Loptr]
"Question everything generally thought to be obvious." - Dieter Rams
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Loptr
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The 1L quartz distillation flask arrived! Wow, the quality is top notch. It arrived packaged in a mini-shipping crate, so it could probably survive
quite a tumble in transit.
[Edited on 4-11-2022 by Loptr]
"Question everything generally thought to be obvious." - Dieter Rams
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Herr Haber
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Looks great! How much was that + shipping ?
Looking at their packaging, the interval between your posts and their website they seem very interesting.
https://www.ykquartz.com/
The spirit of adventure was upon me. Having nitric acid and copper, I had only to learn what the words 'act upon' meant. - Ira Remsen
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