Why is wire gauze used while heating a glass vessel over a flame?

Glass is a bad conductor of heat. If a glass vessel is heated directly over a flame, the heat is not readily conducted to other parts of the vessel and even at the point of contact with the flame, the inside surface does not get as hot as the outside surface.

Consequently the outside surface expands more than the inside surface and the unequal expansions cause the glass to crack.

To avoid this the glass vessel is usually heated by keeping it on a wire gauze made of a good conductor of heat such as iron or copper. This ensures that heat is transferred indirectly and slowly to the glass vessel and the vessel does not crack.

 

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