Pressure hardly doesn't effect crystallic growth because solutions are hardly compressible. However, if so then it would stimulate it.
No
Temperature, pressure, availability of source material, and space available for formation all affect the crystallization process of minerals.
When attempting to crystalize a material, it is important to understand that the slower the crystal grows, the purer the final crystal will be. This is because if the temperature or polarity or pressure or related crytal growth factor is changed too rapidly, it will cause multiple chemicals within the solution to "crash out" By a similar logic, the rate of evaporation effects crystal growth because the faster it is, the less solution there is and, as such, the solubility of virtually all compounds decreases. If you have a rate of evaporation that is too fast, the solubilites of many chemical compounds (impurities) will change along with the solubility of the compound you are trying to crystalize and your crystal will have impurites. However, having a rate of evaportation that is too low can also dramtically increase the time of crystalization!
Crystals are grown for both scientific purposes and for experimentation in labs or science fairs, to demonstrate the various properties of different kinds of crystal formation. In all kinds of formation, the constant temperature plays an important role in crystal development, affecting not only how fast the crystals develop but the ways in which they grow. Read more: How Does Temp Affect the Growth Rate of Crystals? | eHow.com http://www.ehow.com/about_6318908_temp-affect-growth-rate-crystals_.html#ixzz2K4J5sgBq
your mother
There are two things that you can do to maximize the growth of a crystal. You can place a rock inside crystal solution or put the solution inside an eggshell. Calcium carbonite from the rocks and eggshell encourages crystal growth.
A2. Crystals are mineral growth, and mainly occur during conditions favourable to crystal growth. These include metamorphism, where the temperature and pressure are elevated and encourage such growth. Occasionally crystals will precipitate out of solution an lower pressure and temperature. In either event, the type of crystal will reveal some of the history of the parent rock.
no
it doesnt
No
Crystals precipitated from a solution has unique crystal forms. These are formed with the subsequent growth in its nuclei and the solution contains more solute entities that impacts the crystal formation.Ê
Yes it may
Temperature, pressure, availability of source material, and space available for formation all affect the crystallization process of minerals.
yep, it grows better in the dark
Soojin Kim has written: 'Metastable solution thermodynamic properties and crystal growth kinetics' -- subject(s): Crystal growth, Chemical kinetics, Crystallization
S. L. Lehoczky has written: 'Growth of solid solution single crystals' -- subject(s): Crystal growth
Yes temperature does effect crystal growth. it does effect it because of the rate of its cooling the one in cold temperature will cool right awy because it if going to practiclly freeze the one in warm temperature will take longer and will grow larger and have better texture.