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What Makes Glass Transparent?: House

Glass is transparent because photons of visible light do not have enough energy to excite glass electrons to a higher energy level. Glass has a large band gap between its energy bands, meaning its electrons require significantly more energy to move between bands. The energy of visible light photons is not sufficient, so the photons pass through the glass rather than being absorbed or reflected. At wavelengths with higher energies, like ultraviolet light, glass becomes opaque as those photons can excite glass electrons.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
145 views3 pages

What Makes Glass Transparent?: House

Glass is transparent because photons of visible light do not have enough energy to excite glass electrons to a higher energy level. Glass has a large band gap between its energy bands, meaning its electrons require significantly more energy to move between bands. The energy of visible light photons is not sufficient, so the photons pass through the glass rather than being absorbed or reflected. At wavelengths with higher energies, like ultraviolet light, glass becomes opaque as those photons can excite glass electrons.

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manishphy
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

What makes glass transparent?

Ever watch a house being built? Carpenters first erect the basic skeleton of the structure using two-by-four
studs. Then they nail sheathing, usually plywood, to the studs to make walls. Most walls include a window
opening, which holds a sheet of glass situated within a frame. Windows make a home feel bright, warm and
welcoming because they let light enter. But why should a glass window be any more transparent than the wood
that surrounds it? After all, both materials are solid, and both keep out rain, snow and wind. Yet wood is
opaque and blocks light completely, while glass is transparent and lets sunshine stream through unimpeded.
You may have heard some people -- even some science textbooks -- try to explain this by saying that wood is a
true solid and that glass is a highly viscous liquid. They then go on to argue that the atoms in glass are spread
farther apart and that these gaps let light squeeze through. They may even point to the windows of centuries-
old houses, which often look wavy and unevenly thick, as evidence that the windows have "flowed" over the
years like the slow crawl of molasses on a cold day.
In reality, glass isn't a liquid at all. It's a special kind of solid known as an amorphous solid. This is a state of
matter in which the atoms and molecules are locked into place, but instead of forming neat, orderly crystals,
they arrange themselves randomly. As a result, glasses are mechanically rigid like solids, yet have the
disordered arrangement of molecules like liquids. Amorphous solids form when a solid substance is melted at
high temperatures and then cooled rapidly -- a process known as quenching.
In many ways, glasses are like ceramics and have all of their properties: durability, strength and brittleness,
high electrical and thermal resistance, and lack of chemical reactivity. Oxide glass, like the commercial glass
you find in sheet and plate glass, containers and light bulbs, has another important property: It's transparent to
a range of wavelengths known as visible light. To understand why, we must take a closer look at the atomic
structure of glass and understand what happens when photons -- the smallest particles of light -- interact with
that structure.

Electron to Photon: You Don't Excite Me
First, recall that electrons surround the nucleus of an atom, occupying different energy levels. To move from a
lower to a higher energy level, an electron must gain energy. Oppositely, to move from a higher to a lower
energy level, an electron must give up energy. In either case, the electron can only gain or release energy in
discrete bundles.
Now let's consider a photon moving toward and interacting with a solid substance. One of three things can
happen:
1. The substance absorbs the photon. This occurs when the photon gives up its energy to an electron located
in the material. Armed with this extra energy, the electron is able to move to a higher energy level, while the
photon disappears.
2. The substance reflects the photon. To do this, the photon gives up its energy to the material, but a photon of
identical energy is emitted.
3. The substance allows the photon to pass through unchanged. Known as transmission, this happens
because the photon doesn't interact with any electron and continues its journey until it interacts with another
object.
Glass, of course, falls into this last category. Photons pass through the material because they don't have
sufficient energy to excite a glass electron to a higher energy level. Physicists sometimes talk about this in
terms of band theory, which says energy levels exist together in regions known as energy bands. In between
these bands are regions, known as band gaps, where energy levels for electrons don't exist at all. Some
materials have larger band gaps than others. Glass is one of those materials, which means its electrons require
much more energy before they can skip from one energy band to another and back again. Photons of
visible light -- light with wavelengths of 400 to 700 nanometers, corresponding to the colors violet, indigo, blue,
green, yellow, orange and red -- simply don't have enough energy to cause this skipping. Consequently,
photons of visible light travel through glass instead of being absorbed or reflected, making glass transparent.
At wavelengths smaller than visible light, photons begin to have enough energy to move glass electrons from
one energy band to another. For example, ultraviolet light, which has a wavelength ranging from 10 to 400
nanometers, can't pass through most oxide glasses, such as the glass in a window pane. This makes a
window, including the window in our hypothetical house under construction, as opaque to ultraviolet light as
wood is to visible light.












Q:
why glass is transparent?
- rohit (age 15)
pune,maharashtra,india
A:
Not all glass is transparent, since some of it is colored, meaning that it absorbs some
frequencies of light. Nevertheless, as you say, glass that doesn't absorb light does transmit
it. In that way its similar to transparent crystals, such as diamonds.

The reason is basically that the index of refraction of the glass is very nearly uniform on
distances as large as the wavelength of light. That means that the light waves transmit
smoothly, not bouncing off different directions. Although the individual atoms in the glass
would scatter the light in different directions, just as a stick in water will scatter a water
wave. However if you put a lot of regularly placed sticks in water, much closer than the
wavelength of the water wave, the scattered waves from the different sticks will not be in
phase except in the forward and backward directions. That means that when you add the
waves in other directions the crests and troughs will cancel.

Something very similar happens for light hitting glass. Some of the light bounces back from
the surfaces and some transmits through. It doesn't scatter off to the sides, except for a
small amount due to small unevenness density of the glass.

Mike W.

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