|
So, what to do? It seems while melting down some of Aunt
Edna's heirlooms we found out her diamonds couldn't cut glass
'cause that's what they were made of (seems Aunt Edna was just as
lacking in scruples as some others...Ed) and when it mixed in with the
molten gold, we got a really cool Gold-Pink coloured glass. It seems
we had accidentally discovered that gold is the only element, which
provides the glassmaker with the exact colouring properties to create
true hot-pinks, cranberry and purple tones. And most importantly,
colours that are enhanced by incandescent (lightbulb) light in both
transparent and opalescent glasses.
Why gold? Here's where it gets kind of technical, so hang on.
Colours in glass are created by the selective transmission of narrow
parts of the visible spectrum of light. To get a hot pink or grape purple
we have to be able to transmit some light from both the red and blue
ends of the spectrum at the same time while simultaneously
absorbing all the turquoise, green and yellow in the middle of the
spectrum. Gold is the only thing that can do this miraculous feat (Mike
never tried, but probably could too!)
Gold combines together in relatively small non-crystalline
particles of thousands or millions of gold ions (for techies we call this
a colloidal colourant). The final size of these particles determines the
colour we see. The gold ions have to travel through the glass as it
cools and stiffens. If they migrate too fast, the particles get too large,
and we get brown tones. If they move too slowly, they remain so
small that little no colour develops at all. Ah, the trials and tribulations of
melting down Aunt Edna's jewelry! What's a thieving chemist to do?
Hey, those candlesticks of Aunt Edna's that were on the mantle,
aren't they made out of lead? Perfect, let's see if they help. Seems
lead is universally used to control this migration rate, and thereby the
colour of the Gold-Pink (worry warts take note- all glasses we carry
pass environmental tests for leaching. The lead is bound tightly into
the surrounding glass and does not leach out- not the case when
Aunt Edna's candlesticks were out in the open ready to instantly
poison innocent unsuspecting women and children)
So, if you're making a lamp and need real pink flowers, the only
way it will really read true under incandescent light is if it's made
using gold! That explained why I needed Aunt Edna's jewelry- it was
done for your benefit!
By the way, manufacturers actually buy and use real gold,
usually in the form of Krugerrands dissolved in Aqua Regia.
|