Laboratory glassware should be collected in a hard-walled container. 5-gallon plastic buckets with lids are available at no charge from EH&S. Commercially available glass boxes are also acceptable.
Containers and glassware in laboratories can contain some dangerous chemicals. Other compounds may react with ambient air or may boil off at low temperatures. For these reasons and many more, ...
LionGlass, a new family of glass engineered by researchers at Penn State, has secured its first corporate partner, a move ...
DO NOT throw glassware in regular trash cans. Boxes are available through Fisher. Any undamaged corrugated box is suitable and must also be polybag-lined (2 mil). All containers must be clearly ...
but much of the glassware used in the laboratory is made of borosilicate glass, which has several advantages, mostly due to its much lower coefficient of thermal expansion. Borosilicate glass: Can be ...
Using a 3D printer that works with molten glass, researchers forged LEGO-like glass bricks with a strength comparable to concrete. The bricks could have a role in circular construction in which ...
It is the same type of glass used in laboratory equipment, where precision and resistance to temperature changes are critical ...
Engineers developed a new kind of reconfigurable masonry made from 3D-printed, recycled glass. The bricks could be reused many times over in building facades and internal walls.
Researchers have said tiny pieces of glass combined with a toxic metal could provide a new treatment for bone cancer. The ...
A man who went on two OceanGate deep-sea dives to see the Titanic testified that he understood the risk and he could die if ...