IC 6472 Quartz and Silica Part 1 General summary

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
R. M. Santmyers
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
21
File Size:
1086 KB
Publication Date:
Aug 1, 1931

Abstract

"Quartz and silica not only occur in diversified forms in nature but find a multiplicity of uses in industry. The purpose of the present paper is to assemble brief summaries of the many widely differing industries engaged in the production and preparation of these minerals in their principal commercial forms. Due to the scope of the subject it was though advisable to divide the paper into three parts. Part I deals with the subject of quartz and silica in general. It also contains a flow sheet of silica from deposit to consumer (fig. 1). Part II covers the uses and other economic factors of quartz, quartzite, and sandstone, the varieties of silica found in consolidated form. Part III deals with sand and miscellaneous silicas such as tripoli and diatomite. A chart showing the major ramifications of these industries is presented herewith as an introduction to the more detailed discussion that follows.For a more intensive study of many branches of the quartz and silica industries the reader is referred especially to Bulletin 263 of the United States Bureau of Mines, Technology and Uses of Silica and Sand by W. M. Weigel. For annual statistics relative to silica and its products in the United States he is referred to the annual chapters of Mineral Resources of the United States, entitled ""Silica,"" ""Sand and Gravel,"" and ""Abrasives."" With respect to diatomite reference is made to Diatomite, by Paul Hatmaker, recently issued by the U. S. Bureau of Mines as Information Circular 6391. In preparing this paper the author has drawn freely from these sources as well as Marketing of Metals and Minerals, by J. E. Spurr and F. E. Wormser; Non-Metallic Minerals, Occurrence, Preparation and Utilization, by Raymond B. Ladoo; and Abrasives - Part I, Siliceous Abrasives, by V. L. Eardley-Wilmot, Report 573, Mines Brand, Department of Mines, Ottawa, 1927.Acknowledgment is also made to the Foote Mineral Co., which has published in Foote-Prints (vol. 2 of 1929 and vol. 1 of 1930), comprehensive reviews of the uses of crystal quartz in the optical industry and as piezo¬electric crystals.The various forms of silica have attracted attention from the earliest times, and the water-clear crystallized variety was known to the Greeks as""krystallos"" (clear ice), being supposed by them to have been formed from water by the intense cold of the Alps; hence the name ""crystal"" or more commonly ""rock crystal,"" applied to this variety. The name quartz is an old German word of uncertain origin used by G. Agricola in 1529.Silica or silica dioxide (Si02) either free or in combination with other elements constitutes 59.08 per cent of the lithosphere, and quartz alone represents fully 12 per cent` of all rocks. Next to the feldspar group quartz is the most abundant mineral in the earth's crust; and it appears in a greater number of varieties and modes of occurrence than any other mineral. Silica or quartz occurs in crystalline, cryptocrystalline, microcrystalline, and amorphous forms. The most common, however, is the crystalline form, which occurs as three minerals, quartz, tridymite, and crystobalite, and of these three tridymite and crystobalite are quite rare in nature."
Citation

APA: R. M. Santmyers  (1931)  IC 6472 Quartz and Silica Part 1 General summary

MLA: R. M. Santmyers IC 6472 Quartz and Silica Part 1 General summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1931.

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