The world's thinnest sheet of glass, a serendipitous discovery by scientists at Cornell and Germany's University of Ulm, is recorded for posterity in the Guinness Book of World Records.
The "pane" of glass, so impossibly thin that its individual silicon and oxygen atoms are clearly visible via electron microscopy, was identified in the lab of Professor David A Muller.
Just two atoms in thickness, making it literally two-dimensional, the glass was an accidental discovery, Muller said.
Scientists had been making graphene, a two-dimensional sheet of carbon atoms in a chicken wire crystal formation, on copper foils in a quartz furnace.
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They concluded that an air leak had caused the copper to react with the quartz, also made of silicon and oxygen. This produced the glass layer on the would-be pure graphene.
Besides its sheer novelty, Muller said, the work answers an 80-year-old question about the fundamental structure of glass.
Scientists, with no way to directly see it, had struggled to understand it: It behaves like a solid but was thought to look more like a liquid.
"This is the work that, when I look back at my career, I will be most proud of. It's the first time that anyone has been able to see the arrangement of atoms in a glass," Muller said.
The two-dimensional glass could someday find a use in transistors, by providing a defect-free, ultra-thin material that could improve, for example, the performance of processors in computers and smartphones, researchers said.
They published the achievement in early September for inclusion in the 2014 book.