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Re ceramics in microwave ovens (was Re Cell phone
Re: ceramics in microwave ovens (was Re: Cell phone popcorn)



Re: ceramics in microwave ovens (was Re: Cell

phone popcorn)



Source: http://sci.tech−archive.net/Archive/sci.physics/2008−06/msg01705.html







• From: jimp@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

• Date: Sun, 15 Jun 2008 22:25:03 GMT



bz wrote:



jimp@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote in news:vm4ei5−cpa.ln1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx:







bz wrote:



jimp@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote in

news:dujdi5−8cl.ln1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx:







....



Lots of cheap cups with handles have an

embedded wire in the handle

which makes manufacture easier.







No wire in the handle on this cup.







I have never seen a ceramic cup with wire in the handle.





Break it open and look.







Not likely. My wife likes the cup. It looks a lot like this one:

http://www.corellecorner.com/cup−styles/49−cup−styles/85−cup−style−4.html





Yeah, but it isn't that one, is it?





Re: ceramics in microwave ovens (was Re: Cell phone popcorn) 1

Re: ceramics in microwave ovens (was Re: Cell phone popcorn)



Somewhere in Purdue there must be an X−ray machine...





nb: since the cup is Corning Corelle, it is actually technically a glass.

However, glasses are ceramics.





Technically yeah.



BTW, "Corelle" is a trade mark, not a defined material.



Most Corelle products are three layers of two different glasses which

makes them thin, tough, and fairly resistant to thermal shock.



Some Corelle products have decorative gold (at least it looks like

gold) trim and those can't be used in microwave ovens.





[quote from

http://chemed.chem.purdue.edu/genchem/topicreview/bp/materials/ceramic4.htm

l]

"The term ceramic comes from the Greek word for pottery. It is used to

describe a broad range of materials that include glass, enamel, concrete,

cement, pottery, brick, porcelain, and chinaware. This class of materials

is so broad that it is often easier to define ceramics as all solid

materials except metals and their alloys that are made by the high−

temperature processing of inorganic raw materials."

[unquote]







Did it occur to you to wonder why only the

handle got so hot







Did I ever say that ONLY the handle got hot? The cup got

hot too but

the heat went into heating the water in the cup. That kept the

temperature down.





So the cup was filled to the brim and only the handle got "red hot"?







I said [quote] Some ceramics get very hot in a microwave oven. I once

picked up a cup of tea from the oven, only to find that the handle was just

short of red hot.

[unquote]





Re: ceramics in microwave ovens (was Re: Cell phone popcorn) 2

Re: ceramics in microwave ovens (was Re: Cell phone popcorn)







I did NOT say the handle got "red hot". Please be accurate when you quote

me. I make enough mistakes on my own without someone helping by misquoting.







The cup need not be filled to the brim. It takes a lot of calories to heat

water. It only takes a few calories to heat ceramic IF the ceramic has a

low heat capacity.







Understanding the distinction between temperature and heat is critical to

understanding how the handle can get much hotter than the body of the cup.







The handle can only lose heat(calories) through conduction [to the body of

the cup and to my finger], radiation, and convection through air

circulation. The body of the cup loses heat to the water in the cup.







If the ceramic receives uniform heat due to the microwaves, the handle

will get much hotter (higher temperature) than the body of the cup.





By that logic the body of the cup above the water line should be quite

hot.



Was it?



Have you never seen the old "I bet I can boil water in a paper cup"

camping trick be done?



You put a paper cup of water in the camp fire. The water boils below

the water line and the paper cup above the water line burns.





Ceramics are dielectrics.

Many ceramics were developed before 'the age of

microwaves'.





No kidding?





Some of those ceramics have high dielectric losses at

microwave

frequencies. This cup had high dielectric losses.



Re: ceramics in microwave ovens (was Re: Cell phone popcorn) 3

Re: ceramics in microwave ovens (was Re: Cell phone popcorn)





Doubtfull.







More likely than the wire in the handle that you suggested.







http://www.siennatech.com/microwave.html







http://stinet.dtic.mil/oai/oai?verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifie

r=ADP007729 http://www.wise4living.com/khcookware/microwave.htm

http://amasci.com/weird/microwave/voltage2.html





Yes, most glasses get conductive when the temperature is high enough,

but those temperatures are far beyond what one reaches in sucessfull

cooking.



So what?





Most common ceramics have quite low dielectric loss.







Many do. Some don't. Corning's Corelle apparently doesn't. If you have a

reference showing that 'Most common ceramics have quite low dielectric

loss', I would like to see it.

But regardless of whether or not 'most' have low losses, the material in my

Corelle cup has high losses and gets hot quickly in a microwave.





Sigh.



We are talking about losses low enough for a piece of kitchenware

not to get significantly hot in a microwave oven, not building

precision microwave devices.



Either get the cup in question X−rayed or do the experiment.



Put the empty cup in the microwave with another container of water

and nuke for a while.



Does the entire empty cup get hot or just the handle?









Re: ceramics in microwave ovens (was Re: Cell phone popcorn) 4

Re: ceramics in microwave ovens (was Re: Cell phone popcorn)



Pure ceramics don't get hot in microwave

ovens.



You are clearly outside your field of expertise.







First, what is a 'pure ceramic'? As most ceramics consist of a mixture of

compounds, I can only guess that by a pure ceramic that you meant one that

did not contain a wire. In which case, you are clearly wrong when you say

"pure ceramics don't get hot in microwave ovens."





Nothing other than ceramic and glaze in the construction and no conductive

trim or glaze.





The only ceramics that I have familiarity with are the barium titanate

formulations that we used in our capacitors when I worked for Sprague.

Which ceramics are you familiar with and what bearing does your familiarity

have on the hot handle I encountered on my cup?





The ceramics commonly used to make things like cups, bowls, etc.



I've had several cheap promotional coffee mugs with wire in the

handle as well as an Asian tea pot.





Why do you think that modern plates and cups say

'microwave safe' on

the bottom?





Mostly marketing, the same reason you find it on glass kitchenware.







NO! It is a matter of safety.

There are glasses and ceramics that can be used in the oven.

There are glasses and ceramics than can be used on the stove.

There are glasses and ceramics that can be used in the microwave.

Some can be used in all of those places. Some can't.

I know from painful experience that one should pay attention to whether or

not a cup is 'microwave safe'.





The use of kitchenware depends on the material, to state the obvious.



Generally, only materials with low thermal expansion, i.e. not likely

to shatter from thermal shock, can be used on a stove or in an oven.



Re: ceramics in microwave ovens (was Re: Cell phone popcorn) 5

Re: ceramics in microwave ovens (was Re: Cell phone popcorn)





If you can use it on a stove or in an oven and it has no metal

"parts", such as decorative metallic trim, it is usually safe to use

in a microwave oven.





−−

Jim Pennino



Remove .spam.sux to reply.

.









Re: ceramics in microwave ovens (was Re: Cell phone popcorn) 6


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