Cultured Quartz

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Danforth R. Hale
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
10
File Size:
1585 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1964

Abstract

The pressure of military use of quartz resonators led to efforts to Grow high, grade quartz crystals in Germany and in Great Britain during 19)3-25, and was responsible for a series of U.S.A. Signal Corps contracts beginning in 1946 with the Clevite Corporation (as the former Brush Development Company), Bell Telephone Laboratories, Antich College, and others. The technique of growing crystals from the melt, such as KI, NaBr, was already commercially inuse Quartz could not be so grown, since its utility depends on the form stable below 573°C, and, even if it could be grown from an extraordinarily viscous melt, the higher form passing through this transition becomes twinned. Again, several crystals were being grown commercially from water solutions; quartz, however, is listed in the common literature as being insoluble in water. Fused quartz, or vitreous silica, was chosen as raw mater¬ial by the European experimenters because of its thermodynamically lesser stability than quartz, and various alkaline solutions were tried for the purpose of enhancing the solubility.
Citation

APA: Danforth R. Hale  (1964)  Cultured Quartz

MLA: Danforth R. Hale Cultured Quartz. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1964.

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