November 23, 2015

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3D grain of salt aims for world record in Vienna

Scientist Dr Robert Krickl poses in front of his crystal structure model, registered as largest model of this type in the Guinness Book of Records, at the city hall in Vienna, Austria on November 23, 2015
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Scientist Dr Robert Krickl poses in front of his crystal structure model, registered as largest model of this type in the Guinness Book of Records, at the city hall in Vienna, Austria on November 23, 2015

A three-dimensional model magnifying a grain of salt by a billion times went on show in Vienna on Monday, aiming to make it into the Guinness Book of Records.

Made of 38,880 red and white plastic balls representing atoms of sodium and chlorine and 10 kilometres (six miles) of sticks, it aims to be the world's biggest model of a crystal molecule.

"Crystals are very important to our daily lives," said Austrian scientist Robert Krickl, who painstakingly put together the three-metre-(nine-foot)-high model in Vienna's neo-gothic City Hall.

"Crystals are not only glittering stones and ... We can't phone without them, we can't watch TV without them, we can't have clocks without them, we can't live without them," he said.

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