Quote: Originally posted by entheologist | My stove and cooker were in use and my hotplate is at a friends house so I tested out an alternative method of evaporating a solution of a carbonate
salt. I used a steel pot to make a water bath, and added the solution to a pyrex jug and put it in the water bath. I used a butane blowtorch as a
heatsource. I started heating the sides of the steel pot with the blowtorch but it wasn't enough to get the water boiling, so I instead blow torched
the water inside the pot knowing that some of the heat would be rapidly transfered to the pyrex jug. That worked, the contents of the jug started
boiling, but not evenly, only on one side, so I rotated. The jug shattered. Blow torching borosilicate boiling flasks works just fine, but pyrex jugs,
no.
If I ever do that again, I'll use an oil bath and only heat the sides of the stainless steel bath, never let the heat source get too close to the
glass.
[Edited on 31-3-2017 by entheologist] |
You should never ever ever ever heat glassware with a direct flame, and DEFINITELY not a blowtorch! You got lucky with your boiling flasks there,
since they didn't break. Also, what were you thinking heating a flask immersed in water with a torch? The glass above the water line will heat up very
quickly to several hundred degrees, but the water will remain below 100 degrees at all times. The slightest disturbance will cause some water to
splash up onto the super heated glass and its going to break due to thermal difference of a few hundred degrees. |