plastic.

Plastic cover slips are no good for UV or polarization, but they are way better 
than glass if you happen to want to try in-situ diffraction. 
(https://doi.org/10.1107/S0021889800001254)

If you can't afford commercial ones, then you can always cut up some inkjet 
transparency film sheets like McPherson did in the above reference.  Then after 
you've made a few hundred you can ask yourself how much you'd be willing to pay 
somebody else to do it for you.  There is no wrong answer to that question, but 
it will determine which route you take.

-James Holton
MAD Scientist

On 1/31/2019 12:17 AM, Rajnandani Kashyap wrote:
Dear All
I am a PhD student who requires lots of coverslips (!!) for setting up hanging 
drop crystallization. The company sells it for a huge amount. Also there is a 
wide monetary difference between a normal siliconized coverslip and a 22mm 
siliconized circle coverslips. We tried to search for an alternative companies 
but couldn't get any one who sells coverslips with the same dimensions 
(0.19-0.22mm glass thickness and 22 mm glass diameter). Is there any 
alternative company (distribution in India) from where we can buy them for a 
reasonable price?
Thanks in advance for sparing your valuable time and efforts.

Regards
Rajnandani Kashyap
India

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