Pendent

Pendent

sabato 15 ottobre 2011

Scientists reveal why glass is glass Despite solid appearance, glass is actually in a "jammed" state of matter


Image: Colloidal particles

By 

Scientists have made a breakthrough discovery in the bizarre properties of glass, which behaves at times like both a solid and a liquid.
The finding could lead to aircraft that look like Wonder Woman's plane. Such planes could have wings of glass or something called metallic glass, rather than being totally invisible.
The breakthrough involved solving the decades-old problem of just what glass is. It has been known that that despite its solid appearance, glass and gels are actually in a "jammed" state of matter — somewhere between liquid and solid — that moves very slowly. Like cars in a traffic jam, atoms in a glass are in something like suspended animation, unable to reach their destination because the route is blocked by their neighbors. So even though glass is a hard substance, it never quite becomes a proper solid, according to chemists and materials scientists. 
The deceptively liquid-like behavior of glass can be seen when you look at glass in the windows of an old building. The glass begins to sag and distort internally over the centuries, due to the effect of gravity.
Work so far has concentrated on trying to understand the traffic jam, but now Paddy Royall from the University of Bristol, with colleagues in Canberra and Tokyo, has shown that glass fails to be a solid due to the special atomic structures that form in a glass when it cools.
Icosahedron jams
Some materials crystallize as they cool, arranging their atoms into a highly regular pattern called a lattice, Royall said, but although glass "wants" to be a crystal, as it cools the atoms become jammed in a nearly random arrangement, preventing it from forming a regular lattice.
In the 1950s, Sir Charles Frank in the Physics Department at Bristol suggested that the arrangement of the "jam" should form what is known as an icosahedron, but at the time he was unable to prove it.
An icosahedron is like a 3-D pentagon, and just as you cannot tile a floor with pentagons, you cannot fill 3-D space with icosahedrons, Royall explained. That is, you can't make a lattice out of pentagons.
When it comes to glass, Frank thought, there is a competition between crystal formation and pentagons that prevents the construction of a crystal. If you cool a liquid down and it makes a lot of pentagons and the pentagons survive, the crystal cannot form.
It turns out that Frank was right, Royall said, and his team proved this experimentally. You can't watch what happens to atoms as they cool because they are too small, so Royall and his colleagues used special particles called colloids that mimic atoms, but are large enough to be visible using state-of-the-art microscopy. The team cooled some down and watched what happened.
What they found was that the gel these particles formed also "wants" to be a crystal, but it fails to become one due to the formation of icosahedra-like structures — exactly as Frank had predicted.
"It is the formation of these structures that underlie jammed materials and explains why a glass is a glass and not a liquid — or a solid," Royall said.
The findings are detailed in the June 22 issue of the journal Nature Materials. The research was supported in part by a grant from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology as well as the Royal Society.
Preventing jetliner disasters
Knowing the structure formed by atoms as a glass cools represents a major breakthrough in the understanding of meta-stable materials and will allow further development of new strong yet light materials called metallic glasses, he said, already used to make some golf clubs. This stuff is generally shiny black in color, not transparent, due to having a lot of free electrons (think of mercury in an old thermometer).
Metals normally crystallize when they cool, but stress builds up along the boundaries between crystals, which can lead to metal failure.
For example, the world's first jetliner, the British built De Havilland Comet, fell out of the sky due to metal failure. When metals are be made to cool with the same internal structure as a glass and without crystal grain boundaries, they are less likely to fail, Royall said. Metallic glasses could be suitable for a whole range of products, beyond golf clubs, that need to be flexible such as aircraft wings and engine parts, he said.
Glass is not what it seems Royall is part of a group of scientists who think that if you wait long enough, perhaps billions of years, all glass will eventually crystallize into a true solid. In other words, glass is not in an equilibrium state, (although it appears that way to us during our limited lifetimes).
"This is not universally accepted," Royall told LiveScience. "Our work will go some way to making that point more accepted. I think there is a growing weight of evidence that certainly many glasses 'want' to be a crystal."
Still, glass "looks like a liquid and this is one of the great riddles that we have gone some way to solving," Royall said. "It has always been thought that glass has same structure as a liquid, and that's why it looks like it. It does not have same structure as liquid."

© 2011 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.


martedì 16 agosto 2011

Jewelry as Art

We recently read a new book on the subject, and will quote a couple of paragraphs clarifying what art jewelry is. It seems that, nowadays, anyone who produces a handmade item is an artist. The market is flooded with jewelry artists, in fact. The truth is that art can be and normally is handcrafted, but what is handcrafted is not necessarily art. This is an important distinction to be made. However,“(d)oes jewelry have a specific character?...Is it art, fashion or design? The ambiguity emerges from the symbolic, social, and material changeability of the jewel, which wavers between an investment and an ornament, a one –of-a-kind object and an item made in series and so on, in a well-lit and multi-hued intertwining of value and meanings”. 1)
“Sweeping changes have taken place in the jewelry sector in the past few years that have introduced a wide range of materials and forms of ornament radically new and in some cases revolutionary ones, from every standpoint of jewelry production. (...)A new generation of designers…seems to be favoring the use of heterogeneous materials, in some case almost devoid of intrinsic value (…)Art or research jewelry is born from an autonomous creative intent open to new formal solutions .(…)The expression of a new boundary between an item of jewelry and an ornament, and between creativity and research,…give rise to jewels that are…non-conventional, where the preciousness of the object is not channeled by the materials, but by the value inherent in the idea and the project.” 2)
Ultimately, art is in the eye of the beholder, as it must evoke some feeling in the observer. The subject has been discussed for centuries by various disciplines, and nobody has come to a specific conclusion. What is art to me may not be to you, but typically if you see it in a gallery or a museum, there is a general agreement it “must be” art.
Tongue in cheek, we sold most of our pieces through an art gallery (Galleria Osemont, Albissola Mare, Savona Italy).
But ultimately you are the judge. We truly feel the greatest accomplishment is to give pleasure to our visitors. So we hope you enjoy what you see, as that gives more meaning to our work.

1)(Cappelieri, Alba: Jewelry now. Art, fashion, design. Electa (Mondadori S.p.A. Milano) 2010.) pg.99
2) Ibid. pg. 184

giovedì 28 luglio 2011

Nelson Mandela Day

Mandela Day :: 67 ways to change our world

1. Make a new friend. Get to know someone from a different cultural background.

Only through mutual understanding can we rid our communities of intolerance and

xenophobia.

2. Read to someone who can’t. Visit a local home for the blind and open up a new

world for someone else.

3. Fix the potholes in your street or neighbourhood.

4. Help out at the local animal shelter. Dogs without homes still need a walk

and a bit of love.

5. Find out from your local library if it has a story hour and offer to read during it.

6. Offer to take an elderly neighbour who can’t drive to do their shopping/chores.

7. Organise a litter cleanup day in your area.

8. Get a group of people to each knit a square and make a blanket for someone in

need.

9. Volunteer at your police station or local faith-based organisation.

10. Donate your skills!

11. If you’re a builder, help build or improve someone’s home.

12. Help someone to get his/her business off the ground.

13. Build a website for someone who needs one, or for a cause you think needs the support.

14. Help someone get a job. Put together and print a CV for them, or help them with their interview skills.

15. If you’re a lawyer, do some pro bono work for a worthwhile cause or person.

16. Write to your area councillor about a problem in the area that requires attention, which you, in your personal capacity, are unable to attend to.

17. Sponsor a group of learners to go to the theatre/zoo.

Help out for good health

18. Get in touch with your local HIV organisations and find out how you can help.

19. Help out at your local hospice, as staff members often need as much support as the patients.

20. Many terminally ill people have no one to speak to. Take a little time to have a chat and bring some sunshine into their lives.

21. Talk to your friends and family about HIV.

22. Get tested for HIV and encourage your partner to do so too.

23. Take a bag full of toys to a local hospital that has a children’s ward.

24. Take younger members of your family for a walk in the park.

25. Donate some medical supplies to a local community clinic.

26. Take someone you know, who can’t afford it, to get their eyes tested or their teeth checked.

27. Bake something for a support group of your choice.

28. Start a community garden to encourage healthy eating in your community.

29. Donate a wheelchair or guide dog, to someone in need.

30. Create a food parcel and give it to someone in need.

Become an educator

31. Offer to help out at your local school.

32. Mentor a school leaver or student in your field of expertise.

33. Coach one of the extramural activities the school offers. You can also

volunteer to coach an extramural activity the school doesn’t offer.

34. Offer to provide tutoring in a school subject you are good at.

35. Donate your old computer.

36. Help maintain the sports fields.

37. Fix up a classroom by replacing broken windows, doors and light bulbs.

38. Donate a bag of art supplies.

39. Teach an adult literacy class.

40. Paint classrooms and school buildings.

41. Donate your old textbooks, or any other good books, to a school library.

Help those living in poverty

42. Buy a few blankets, or grab the ones you no longer need from home and give

them to someone in need.

43. Clean out your cupboard and donate the clothes you no longer wear to someone

who needs them.

44. Put together food parcels for a needy family.

45. Organise a bake sale, car wash or garage sale for charity and donate the proceeds.

46. To the poorest of the poor, shoes can be a luxury. Don’t hoard them if you don’t wear them. Pass them on!

47. Volunteer at your local soup kitchen.

Care for the youth

48. Help at a local children’s home or orphanage.

49. Help the kids with their studies.

50. Organise a friendly game of soccer, or sponsor the kids to watch a game at

the local stadium.

51. Coach a sports team and make new friends.

52. Donate sporting equipment to a children’s shelter.

53. Donate educational toys and books to a children’s home.

54. Paint, or repair, infrastructure at an orphanage or youth centre.

55. Mentor someone. Make time to listen to what the kids have to say and give

them good advice.

Treasure the elderly

56. If you play an instrument, visit your local old-age home and spend an hour

playing for the residents and staff.

57. Learn the story of someone older than you. Too often people forget that the

elderly have a wealth of experience and wisdom and, more often than not, an

interesting story to tell.

58. Take an elderly person grocery shopping; they will appreciate your company

and assistance.

59. Take someone’s dog for a walk if they are too frail to do so themselves.

60. Mow someone’s lawn and help them to fix things around their house.

Look after your environment

61. If there are no recycling centres in your area, petition your area

councillor to provide one.

62. Donate indigenous trees to beautify neighbourhoods in poorer areas.

63. Collect old newspapers from a school/community centre/hospital and take them

to a recycling centre.

64. Identify open manhole covers or drains in your area and report them to the

local authorities.

65. Organise the company/school/organisation that you work with to switch off

all unnecessary lights and power supplies at night and on weekends.

66. Engage with people who litter and see if you can convince them of the value

of clean surroundings.

67. Organise to clean up your local park, river, beach, street, town square or

sports grounds with a few friends. Our children deserve to grow up in a clean

and healthy environment.

© 2010 Nelson Mandela Foundation. Designed by Flow Communications

Welcome

Welcome to the blog of Luna Blu Art Studio.
In these pages we will explore in more depth what Art Jewelry is about, and we will also mention our opinion on cultural matters that affect us all.