Glass is not a good conductor of electricity.
Everything can conduct electricity. However, glass can only conduct electricity on a very small scale, so it cannot be used to conduct enough electricity to run anything electrical.
It is an insulator- glass does not conduct electricity (although it can conduct heat).
Glass is an electrical insulator. It does not conduct electricity. Many insulators made for power transmission lines or in the older days telephone or telegraph insulators, are made out of glass due to their superior insulating qualities.
Sometimes. Metals will conduct both heat and electricity. Glass will conduct heat but not electricity.
there is no metal to conduct to.
Not at all. Glass doesn't conduct electricity. in fact they use glass as an insulator on electric lines.
Only metals and posative ions can conduct electricity since electricity is the flow of electrons in a circuit.
Materials that do not conduct electricity well are Insulating materials, or insulators. Examples include glass, rubber, plastic, air, ceramic, porcelain, dry paper and dry wood. Pure water will not conduct electricity at all.
Metals actually conduct electricity, not insulate them. Some metals conduct better than others, but the point is that metals don't insulate heat or electricity at all.Glucose rubber cold glass and water
No. An optical fiber is a slim hair composed of glass. Glass is a fine insulator, and an optical fiber doesn't conduct electricity at all.
I think it could be lead
covalent bonds do not conduct electricity covalent bonds do not conduct electricity covalent bonds do not conduct electricity