Many people make the assumption that marble , granite and other finely polished naturals shine because a 'polish' has been added to them. Nothing could be further from the truth.
Naturals are made of
crystals. The crystals are made up of different minerals. Each mineral
forms a different crystal shape. These different crystals interlock
together to make up the stone. When stone is first quarried it has a
very rough texture to Indian Black Galaxy Granite its surface as it breaks along the crystal joints.
By using a series of graduated grinders the stone is ground down. The
grinders are normally made from industrial diamonds and to start the
process a very rough one is used. It is the same principle as sanding
down wood. You start with glass paper that is very coarse and gradually
use finer and finer glass paper until you have a fine, smooth finish to
the wood. With stone the glass paper is replaced with diamond studded
pads and these get finer and finer Indian Black Galaxy Granite.
What the grinding is
doing is cutting the rough edges off the stone by scratching it and as
the diamonds become smaller and smaller the scratches become finer and
ultimately microscopic. What you end up with is a very smooth surface to
the Indian Black Galaxy Granite stone. The crystals have by a slow process of finer and finer
grinding been worn down until on the surface they are all perfectly flat
and smooth with each other. A perfectly flat surface will reflect the
light uniformly and will look like glass.
Consider a mirror that
reflects light uniformly giving you a clear sharp image. Make the glass
curved or rippled and you get a less clear, less sharp image reflected
back. The same applies to stone. If the crystals are flat then you get a
perfect image reflected back Indian Black Galaxy Granite and the stone looks incredibly shiny.
Roughen the surface slightly and the reflected light ceases to give you a
perfect reflection and the stone begins to dull. Any interference with
the stones surface can cause this dulling to appear. It could be a
series of minute scratches made by dirt or it could be caused by acid
materials etching into the stone destroying its shine in that region.
To get the shine back the
stone must be ground down again. Consequently the shine on a stone is
not the product of adding some chemical to the stone but is a property
of the stone itself.. The harder the stone the more difficult it is to
grind but the greater degree of shine that can be achieved, which is why
polished has the greatest degree of shine, followed by then limestone.
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