plexiglass viewing bubbles.. interesting
consider this however: melting point of most plastics is from 310 degrees F (Noryl) to about 621 F (Teflon). Ah but those arent transparent! The ones you want are transparent plastics, and Acrylic has a continuous service temperature in presence of air of about 180 F max. Coefficient of linear expansion for Acrylic is 1.3 * 10^4. It ranks pretty good with other transparent plastics - at about 92% light transmittance - you may also consider Perspex (92% light transmittence, continuous service temp 180F); or better yet-
Polycarbonate aka Lexan (91% light transmittence, continuous service temp 475F - will start deflecting at 539F, coeff of linear expansion 3.9 * 10^5 );
PALSUN or PALTUF polycarbonate (89% light transmittence, continuous service temp 248 F)
Now the firework components:
Red strontium salts, lithium salts
lithium carbonate, Li2CO3 = red
strontium carbonate, SrCO3 = bright red
Orange calcium salts
calcium chloride, CaCl2
calcium sulfate, CaSO4·xH2O, where x = 0,2,3,5
Gold incandescence of iron (with carbon), charcoal, or lampblack
Yellow - sodium compounds ( sodium nitrate, NaNO3; cryolite, Na3AlF6)
Electric White - white-hot metal, such as magnesium or aluminum, barium oxide, BaO
Green - barium compounds + chlorine producer, barium chloride, BaCl+ = bright green
Blue - copper compounds + chlorine producer, copper acetoarsenite (Paris Green), Cu3As2O3Cu(C2H3O2)2 = blue
copper (I) chloride, CuCl = turquoise blue
Purple - mixture of strontium (red) and copper (blue) compounds
Silver - burning aluminum, titanium, or magnesium powder or flakes
How hot do those burn?
Kelvin Celsius Color
750 480 faint red glow
850 580 dark red
1000 730 bright red, slightly orange
1200 930 bright orange
1400 1100 pale yellowish orange
1600 1300 yellowish white
> 1700 > 1400 white (yellowish if seen from a distance)
So from 750 Kelvin (red) to 1700 Kelvin (white) - that's about 890F to 2600F
You see.. the sucky thing is.. 890F > 475F. That is where those coefficient of expansions come into play - you can even calculate a double integral of the time it would take for a flare to pass through an n inches thick transparent plastic bubble and cook them alive inside.