increased solubility
They balance out the kinetic energy and affect the shape of the crystal.
Ammonia will cause the salt crystal to grow bigger and it will also speed up the process of thhe salt crystal forming.
CMMT DA IDK DA ALBUMGEEK POWER BugEydBoii o_Oat Nathaniel.grose@gmail.com on myspace
Yes, temperature does affect crystal growth. Hot water makes the crystals grow faster because the hotter the water, the hotter the crystal solution will be which makes the molecules move faster. This movement allows water to evaporate quicker leaving particles behind to form into crystals.
no
They balance out the kinetic energy and affect the shape of the crystal.
Ammonia will cause the salt crystal to grow bigger and it will also speed up the process of thhe salt crystal forming.
Properties of ionic compounds:High melting/boiling pointsGiant regular crystalline structuresolubledoes not conduct electricity when soliddoes conduct electricity as a solution or liquid
Metallurgic dislocations are defects or irregularities within the crystal structure of a metal. These dislocations can affect the physical properties of the metal, such as yield strength.
Temperature doesn't really affect the crystal size; the rate of cooling is the major factor. The faster the mineral, rock, etc. (whatever has the crystals) cools, the smaller the crystals- the slower the larger. If you were "growing" crystals with a set, the warmer the temperature generally means the larger the crystals.
Pressure hardly doesn't effect crystallic growth because solutions are hardly compressible. However, if so then it would stimulate it.
CMMT DA IDK DA ALBUMGEEK POWER BugEydBoii o_Oat Nathaniel.grose@gmail.com on myspace
Yes, temperature does affect crystal growth. Hot water makes the crystals grow faster because the hotter the water, the hotter the crystal solution will be which makes the molecules move faster. This movement allows water to evaporate quicker leaving particles behind to form into crystals.
No, absolutely not. There are much smaller particles, first Electrons (which are part of reactions), Then Quarks that neutrons and protons are made of (and are part of reactions), and much, much smaller particles after that also are involved in chemical reactions.
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!
Yes.
no