Re: Microwave absorbing materials?
- From: bruce.sinclair@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (Bruce Sinclair)
- Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2007 23:05:32 GMT
In article <131nc3073d8bad8@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Marvin <physchem@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Roman King wrote:
I have been using a microwave oven to treat solid plastics. For thatAnything that absorbed microwaves would get hot. Water uses
purpose, I place a small glass beaker filled with water to absorb excess
microwave. The problem is that I must add water everytime I use the
microwave oven,which becomes an inconvenient chores. I am wondering
whether anybody could suggest other inexpensive and commonly available
microwave absorbing materials which does not much evaporate as water.
Roman
a lot of the energy as heat of vaporization, and it won't
get hotter than 100C. And it is cheap. Plus, microwave
ovens intentionally use a wavelength that is absorbed
strongly by water.
... or to be a little more accurate, the O-H bond :)
.
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: Microwave absorbing materials?
- From: Uncle Al
- Re: Microwave absorbing materials?
- References:
- Microwave absorbing materials?
- From: Roman King
- Re: Microwave absorbing materials?
- From: Marvin
- Microwave absorbing materials?
- Prev by Date: Re: Microwave absorbing materials?
- Next by Date: Re: Gold Dust on Aluminum
- Previous by thread: Re: Microwave absorbing materials?
- Next by thread: Re: Microwave absorbing materials?
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|