One problem is that you're wanting to work with quartz. It conveys optical energy very efficiently, similar to fiber optic cable. Even if the end of
the tube itself feels cool, optical energy travels down the tube to the stoppers, where it gets dissipated as heat. This can happen even with fairly
long tubing.
Ever notice that if you bend fiber optic cable too tightly, that light escapes around the area of the bend? There's a certain minimum radius in the
material that is needed for light to conduct efficiently. Energy transfer can be manipulated in quartz tubing the same way, by means of compressing
several quartz "rings" at either end of the tube. The idea is for most of the energy to escape the tight bends in the rings, before it makes it to
the stoppers. A custom glass blower would be needed for this, and it requires a lathe.
Here's a website explaining the same thing in a different way:
http://www.ilpi.com/glassblowing/quartzmaria.html |