Kind: captions Language: en glass is inherently brittle it is the very symbol we use for fragility but these days we expect so much from this material we want it to be perfectly transparent scratch resistant thin and even flexible but most of all we want it not to break so is it possible to make unbreakable glass well in this video I will make the case that glass is one of the most important materials humans have ever made it is transformed how we live launched numerous scientific revolutions and forever altered how we think about our place in the universe part of this video was sponsored by s in mid2 2006 Steve Jobs had a problem Apple was working on the first iPhone set to be released in January 2007 but jobs wasn't satisfied with the screen the prototypes he was testing had plastic screens which scratched easily so jobs wanted glass but regular glass wouldn't work it too would get scratched up and it would also shatter plus he wanted the phone to be slick so the glass had to be really thin so he called up the CEO of Corning Wendell weeks to ask him to make the glass for apple and 6 months later it was on the first iPhone this was Gorilla Glass gorilla glass has been used in phones computers and wearable devices for the last 17 years now it's used on billions of devices and over the years it's become a lot more durable so we sent for tassium producer Peter to corning's headquarters to see for ourselves how Gorilla Glass is made and how it works we'll need a volunteer yeah yes that's me all right so this is what we call our key scratch demo in here we have a polycarbonate which is basically a plastic and then we have a griller glass and what you can do is scratch this side first polycarbonate see how it goes yep definitely scratches yep trying to scratch in our logo it's not quite there you go are we getting veritasium yes all right so now try the same thing on the other side so this is Grill glass yeah definitely definitely does no scratch to break glass requires two things a flaw and stress to introduce the flaw they sand blasted a spot in the middle of the glass to roughen up itself surface and Peter will apply the stress take that tip and put it inside that Circle and push down see if you can brece it for not too hard right no all right so next we have strengthened soda lot strengthened as much as you can for soda l so all right harder for sure a little bit next we have gorill glass I'm kind of terrified oh map right I know like we don't actually want to do this but I want to do this so are you kidding me there's two respon the first response is either this is a really great demo I completely understand what you're showing me the second response is I'm taking this person need to tr to break this SL okay uh it is a very good demo I've like you're really impressed at this point uh I still want to break right last one no like I'm I'm bending the stylus okay [Music] amazing glass has existed in nature for billions of years it's formed by meteorite impacts lightning strikes and volcanic eruptions but when humans came along they found ways to use glass obsidian is volcanic glass it forms when lava cools quickly it's extremely brittle so when you hit it with another rock you can chip off sections of it to make a sharper and Sharper Edge there's evidence of obsidian being used for cutting implements Arro heads and tips of Spears as early as 1.2 million years ago and it hasn't gone out of fashion today some surgical scalples have their tips sharpened to just 3 nanm across and and the best material for this purpose is Obsidian compared to the million plus years we've been using glass we only started making it very recently around 5,600 years ago most common glass is composed mainly of oxygen and silicon the two most abundant elements in Earth's crust in nature you find them in the form of quartz crystallin silicon dioxide crystallin means that the atoms are arranged in a regular repeating structure and quartz is the primary constituent of sand so if you take some sand heat it up to about 1700° cus until it melts and then rapidly cool it it forms glass during the rapid cooling process the atoms don't have enough time to return to their periodically arranged crystal structure so instead they are stuck where they are like a liquid that's been flash frozen in place that is why glass is considered an Orphus solid amorphous just means disorganized not in any regular Arrangement but perhaps this is where the misconception about glass being a liquid comes from it isn't a liquid at room temperature glass is solid because the atoms are fixed in place they can't flow past each other like in a liquid I even made a video about this 9 years ago they are disordered but they are solid this amorphous structure is also what makes glass so brittle because there's no way for the structure to relieve stress when stress is applied to the glass A small crack will form at a flaw on the surface and as the glass cracks the stress is applied to atoms with fewer neighbors so the crack grows bigger which eventually leads to the glass fracturing so next we'll move to what we call slaper Demos what we're using is sandpaper um this represents like an asphalt cut surface sure so if you were to get out of your car and you accidentally drop on in the park M and what we're using is this fixture it's bending it so it's pre-stressing it we have our rough surface to introduce fla and I'm Ge we Al glass is similar to some thetive stuff different things onm and when you're ready you can dve on three two one some sounds okay all right so broke not what you want to see when you pick up your phone off the park no heart break and then we have a gorilla glass and what we call the mega slap right very exciting name right now you can see me dramatically increase the height and I do it from J no from very top from the very top okay so we're not just increasing the height we're also starting from way up here right all right 3 2 1 no we're good that's pretty cool while the basic recipe for glass involves silicon dioxide glass makers have been adding other ingredients to change its properties for thousands of years adding sodium carbonate also known as soda and calcium oxide also known as lime lowers the temperature at which it becomes liquid from 1700° C to around 1,000° C and that's why sodal lime glass accounts for around 90% of all glass manufactured today another recipe includes adding Boron trioxide to the mixture forming a boros silicate glass glass is usually quite sensitive to changes in temperature if you throw boiling water on your car's windshield it'll likely shatter due to the glass rapidly expanding but boros silicate glass has a really low coefficient of thermal expansion it doesn't grow or Shrink very much even with drastic temperature changes so it's often used for laboratory glass like beakers let's go you want to grab a pair of these green glasses too yeah heavy oh yeah I can't see any and while this specific recipe for Gorilla Glass is secret it is based on a combination of silicon aluminum magnesium and [Music] sodium and the recipe keeps changing the scientists are constantly trying different formulations to find more durable and scratch resistant glasses here this is so cool do you ever feel like a pizza chef right [Music] good this facility is actually where that experimentation takes [Music] place the earliest human-made glass was likely an accident people had been working metal for thousands of years before they made glass so it's thought that some sand made its way into metalworking furnaces forming small glass beads but soon glass making became its own art form to make decorations ornaments statues table wear and containers unlike clay glass is impermeable to water making it an ideal material for bowls and Bottles but then glass makers noticed that by adding other elements into the mix they could change the color of the glass by adding Cobalt oxide you would get a vivid blue adding cerite makes red but all of the historical glasses we've been talking about have been opaque which is not really what we think of as glass today after glass making was invented thousands of years passed before we invented transparent glass that's because making it is actually pretty difficult the first step came around 100 AD when glass makers in Alexandria added manganese dioxide into the mixture which led to a semi-opaque glass it definitely wasn't transparent but it did let sunlight through this is when glass began being used for Windows and glass windows were a huge deal I mean they provide a physical barrier that keeps the warm air in and the wind and critters out while still allowing light to shine into your home but the first truly transparent glass was made many centuries later around the Italian city of Venice the art of glass making was thriving and bringing a lot of money into the city there was just one problem to make and manipulate glass you need very hot furnaces and at the time Venice was a City built almost entirely out of wood so yeah glass makers were bringing a lot of money into the city but they also kept accidentally burning it down so in 1291 the government of Venice had had enough so they moved all the glass makers to the island of Morano the island became known as the of glass celebrated for making the most beautiful and intricate glasswar anywhere on Earth this is also where the glass maker Angelo barovier invented clear glass he took some seaweed rich in potassium oxide and manganese and burned it to create Ash then he added this ash into his glass and when it cooled he found that the glass was [Music] transparent most materials are opaque because when photons hit them the photons are absorbed the photon excites an electron pushing it up to a higher energy level but this only happens when the photons energy matches the energy of an allowed electron transition and different materials have different energy levels in transparent glass the energy required to move an electron from a lower state to a higher state is higher than the amount of energy that a photon a visible light has so the photon just passes right through now while glass is transparent to visible light it does interact with other parts of the electromagnetic spectrum it absorbs much of the ultraviolet spectrum because UV photons have more energy hence they can push the electron to the higher energy level and be absorbed that makes it opaque to UV this is also how colored glass is made you add impurities into the glass which affects the electron energy levels which then changes the color of the glass if you look at a pane of glass side on you might notice that it looks slightly green which is because the most common glass used for Windows soda lime has impurities of iron oxides which give the glass A green tinge the glass absorbs more of the other colors than it does green so that's why we see it I think the only way we truly appreciate how important transparent glasses would be if all of a sudden it disappeared so your windows glasses screens all gone but there is another element in our daily lives that we take for granted which is connectivity I mean we are always connected to the internet and losing that connection even for a few minutes can be pretty uncomfortable especially when you're traveling staying connected abroad requires either paying exorbitant roaming fees or a continuous hunt for public Wi-Fi but luckily you can avoid all of this with today's sponsor s s makes it incredibly easy to set up a sell plan with data in more than 150 countries and it's way cheaper than roaming I went to Germany for our recent thermite video and here's how easy it was to set up an eim with s after downloading the app to my phone all I had to do was click on the country select a plan and activate the eim then when I landed I instantly connected to a local network with no hidden charges that was it you don't have to use any Shady public Wi-Fi or worry about scammers selling fake SIM cards in front of the airport download S once and you'll always be connected and if you find out that your phone isn't eim compatible you'll get a full refund to try s you can scan this QR code or click the link in the description make sure to use code veritasium at checkout to get a special 15% off your first purchase so I want to thank Sy for sponsoring this part of the video and now back to transparent glass truly transparent glass was a massive deal for 3 three reasons sometime in the early 1300s in Northern Italy this clear glass was ground shaped and Polished into small discs that were thicker in the center than at the edges due to their resemblance to lentil beans they became known as lenses glasses to correct farsightedness didn't seem all that important at the time because literacy rates were so low they were almost exclusively used by monks but after the invention of the printing press Circa 1440 glasses became a vital tool the printing press led to a precipitous drop in the cost of producing books which led to a rapid increase in literacy rates now a large number of people became aware that they were farsighted thankfully there was a technology available to solve the problem 150 years later a father and son Hans and Zacharias Johnson put two lenses in line with each other rather than side by side and this was likely the world's first microscope it made objects appear about 20 times their original size in the 1660s antthony van leuan hook made significant improvements on the microscope by grinding the lenses himself he could magnify things 200 times allowing him to see human cells a few years later Robert Hook published micrographia a book full of beautiful sketches of the microscopic world and all all of this was possible because of transparent glass and in 16008 Hans liers an ey glass maker applied for a patent for a spy glass his idea was for it to be used in Warfare to spy on your enemy on the battlefield but the next year Galileo galile heard about his idea and realized that he could point this device toward the sky to study the stars and planets Galileo's telescope magnified objects in the night sky by about 30 times in 1610 he was able to see the craters of the Moon in detail the phases of Venus and four of Jupiter's largest moons these observations were the final nail in the coffin for the geocentric model of the universe he saw moons that were clearly revolving around Jupiter and not the Earth and how else could you explain the phases of Venus rather than to say that the planet must go around the Sun none of this would have been discovered without the invention of transparent glass four centuries later we can now make glass that is orders of magnitude more transparent than water glass that is so transparent that if you were able to make a column as deep as the Mariana Trench you'll be able to see all the way to the bottom this is the glass inside Optical [Music] fibers oh this is do real I'm soap but the main thing we all need is durable glass so how do you take a substance that is typically delicate and brittle and improve its scratch resistance and drop resistance first you start with an aluminum silicate base and then after the glass is made you submerge it in a potassium salt solution at 420° C yeah it really does look like water doesn't it yeah and don't know if I want to drink it potassium and sodium are chemically very similar I mean they both have one electron in their outer shell so during this process some of the sodium atoms are replaced by potassium atoms in the glass now potassium atoms are physically larger than sodium atoms but the glass is already set it's rigid so it doesn't increase in size so now there's the larger potassium atoms all squeeze together taking up the same amount of space as before this increas es the compressive strength in the surface of the glass which makes it more durable can you see any visual difference sides between me home honestly no I have two pieces of glass one of them has gone through the iron exchange process the other one hasn't I don't know which one is L and uh we're going to figure that out really soon every ready 3 2 1 [Music] okay that's really cool can I you get it harder yeah that was a thunk my mind is genuinely blow that's really cool that's all just like I exchange right that's all just there's no other difference right you just put it in a bunch of salt yep for a few hours fall off yep I'm trying to think of a good analogy for this you know I can imagine if there were just a whole bunch of people sort of standing around casually and you try to run through them you'd probably be able to bounce through a few of them break through the crowd but what if instead all of those people were squeezed together shoulder-to-shoulder you know like people trying to get into a Subway or something if you try to run through them all of those forces are just going to add up and prevent you from getting in or for making a dent making a crack anything like that but the scientist Corning are constantly trying to refine the process to make the glass even more durable there is a whole team at the facility that is dedicated to testing and measuring different glass prototypes all right we're displacing it by 1 and 1/2 mm yep 2 mm who and they really put the glass through its Paces conducting bending tests scratching tests and dropping heavy steel balls onto the Glass 3 2 1 they also have replica phones with different glasses for the screen and they drop them from ever increasing Heights but we can go up a little bit and maybe right maybe we can imagine that I'm taking a selfie all of this is to make the next version of Gorilla Glass even more durable than it already is like are we doing this if you want to oh yeah 1.7 m that's roughly selfie height 3 2 1 amazing go down and pick that up Still Still survived D that's pretty wild you know I think it's rather ironic that we are making this video right now while my phone uh looks like this I don't know can you see those yeah uh so it's still glass it still cracks it is not perfect yet but it is constantly improving because scientists are working on ways to make this material more and more durable and we have come such a long way I am just appreciative that I can have this material and and it is amazing even if it does still crack sometimes with people who just refuse to get a case for their phone