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The following table lists some physical properties of soda-lime glasses.
Soda-lime glass for mass production is melted in gas fired units.
Usually there were other impurities which made it softer than modern soda-lime glass.
Soda-lime glasses account for about 90% of manufactured glass.
The union represented workers who made soda-lime glass (or "green glass").
Soda-lime glass could be worked with a propane torch, which would be easier to get hold of.
Baxter used found objects including bark and nails to produce moulds for soda-lime glass.
Most flat glass is soda-lime glass, produced by the float glass process.
The resulting glass contains about 70 to 74% silica by weight and is called a soda-lime glass.
The tempered soda-lime glass products have been made in Charleroi, Pa. since the 1940s.
Glass bakeware is often made of tempered soda-lime glass.
Soda-lime glass is relatively inexpensive, chemically stable, reasonably hard, and extremely workable.
Effetre is a variety of soda-lime glass.
The investigations showed that all the beads are made of soda-lime glass with a sodium oxide content of up to 20 percent.
The proportions differ from the traditional soda-lime glasses in low amount of silica (less than 60 mol.
It is also less likely to crack while working with it in making pieces of variable thickness than is soda-lime glass.
The most popular glass for lampworking is soda-lime glass, which is available pre-colored.
The remainder is Soda-lime glass.
It is multiple times stronger than soda-lime glass commonly used in windows, resists scratches and has a "beautiful, pristine" finish.
To improve thermal efficiency (insulation properties) thin film coatings are applied to the raw soda-lime glass.
It may be based on boro-silicate or soda-lime glass with other metallic oxides added to improve its thermal and optical properties.
These ceramics also include silica-based glasses such as Homosil fused quartz, soda-lime glass, and the like.
Borosilicate glass is less dense (at about 2.23g/cm3) than typical soda-lime glass due to the low atomic weight of boron.
Silicates are also in whiteware ceramics such as porcelain, and in traditional quartz-based soda-lime glass.
Corning manufactured Pyrex with borosilicate glass from 1915 and switched to soda-lime glass in the 1940s.
Molten soda-lime-silica glass can be "poured into water to obtain a frit", which is then ground to a powder.
In a multi-component disordered solid like soda-lime-silica glass a single spherically averaged diffraction pattern is quite inadequate.
Hellenistic glass is the typical soda-lime-silica glass, to which lime was not intentionally added, but it was provided through the agent of sand.
The main type of glass found in the Anglo-Saxon period is a soda-lime-silica glass, continuing the Roman tradition of producing glass.
The glasses from this period contain high levels of barium oxide (BaO) and lead, distinguishing them from the soda-lime-silica glasses of Western Asia and Mesopotamia.
Soda-lime glass, also called soda-lime-silica glass, is the most prevalent type of glass, used for windowpanes and glass containers (bottles and jars) for beverages, food, and some commodity items.
Chemical analysis of this glass has revealed that they are a soda-lime-silica glass but with a lower iron and manganese oxide content than the high iron, manganese and titanium glass used to make vessels.
Of the vast quantity of glass fragments from Jalame, both vessel sherds and cullet, most were aqua and green and all were soda-lime-silica glasses melted in highly reducing conditions (Schreurs and Brill 1984).
"Coade stone consists mainly of a ball clay (from Dorset or Devon) to which were added grog, flint and sand to reduce shrinkage, and soda-lime-silica glass to help vitrify it," John P. S. Davis writes in "Antique Garden Ornament" (Antique Collectors' Club, 1998).