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quartz
quartza hard, crystalline mineral Not to be confused with:quarts – measures of dry or liquid volumequartz Q0020000 (kwôrts)n. A very hard mineral composed of silica, SiO2, found worldwide in many different types of rocks, including sandstone and granite. Varieties of quartz include agate, chalcedony, chert, flint, opal, and rock crystal. [German Quarz, from Middle High German quarc, of Slavic origin.] quartz′ose′ (kwôrt′sōs′) adj.quartz (kwɔːts) n1. (Minerals) a colourless mineral often tinted by impurities, found in igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic rocks. It is used in the manufacture of glass, abrasives, and cement, and also as a gemstone; the violet-purple variety is amethyst, the brown variety is cairngorm, the yellow variety is citrine, and the pink variety is rose quartz. Composition: silicon dioxide. Formula: SiO2. Crystal structure: hexagonal2. (Ceramics) short for quartz glass[C18: from German Quarz, of Slavic origin]quartz (kwɔrts) n. the commonest mineral, silicon dioxide, SiO2, occurring in crystals, grains, and cryptocrystalline masses: the chief component of sand. [1750–60; < German Quarz] quartz•ose (ˈkwɔrt soʊs) quartz′ous (-səs) adj. quartz (kwôrts) A hard, transparent mineral composed of silicon dioxide. Quartz is the most common of all minerals. It occurs as a component of rocks such as sandstone and granite, and separately in a variety of forms such as rock crystal, flint, and agate. Some crystalline forms, such as amethyst, are considered gemstones. Quartz is the mineral used to represent a hardness of 7 on the Mohs scale.quartzA hard silicate mineral.ThesaurusNoun | 1. | quartz - colorless glass made of almost pure silicalechatelierite, quartz glass, vitreous silica, crystalnatural glass - magma of any composition that cooled very rapidlysilica, silicon dioxide, silicon oxide - a white or colorless vitreous insoluble solid (SiO2); various forms occur widely in the earth's crust as quartz or cristobalite or tridymite or lechatelierite | | 2. | quartz - a hard glossy mineral consisting of silicon dioxide in crystal form; present in most rocks (especially sandstone and granite); yellow sand is quartz with iron oxide impuritiesquartz crystal - a thin plate or small rod of quartz cut along certain lines and ground so that it can produce an electric signal at a constant frequency; used in crystal oscillatorsatomic number 14, Si, silicon - a tetravalent nonmetallic element; next to oxygen it is the most abundant element in the earth's crust; occurs in clay and feldspar and granite and quartz and sand; used as a semiconductor in transistorsmineral - solid homogeneous inorganic substances occurring in nature having a definite chemical compositionrock crystal, transparent quartz - a clear quartz used in making electronic and optical equipmentcairngorm, smoky quartz - a smoky yellow or brown quartzamethyst - a transparent purple variety of quartz; used as a gemstonecalcedony, chalcedony - a milky or greyish translucent to transparent quartzcitrine - semiprecious yellow quartz resembling topazrose quartz - a translucent rose-red variety of quartz used for ornamentssilica, silicon dioxide, silicon oxide - a white or colorless vitreous insoluble solid (SiO2); various forms occur widely in the earth's crust as quartz or cristobalite or tridymite or lechatelieriteaventurine, sunstone - a translucent quartz spangled with bits of mica or other mineralscommon topaz, false topaz, topaz - a yellow quartz | Translationsquartz (kwoːts) noun, adjective (of) a kind of hard substance found in rocks, often in the form of crystals. 石英[的] 石英(的) IdiomsSeequartzedquartz
quartz, one of the commonest of all rock-forming minerals and one of the most important constituents of the earth's crust. Chemically, it is silicon dioxide, SiO2. It occurs in crystals of the hexagonal system, commonly having the form of a six-sided prism terminating in a six-sided pyramid; the crystals are often distorted and twins are common. Quartz may be transparent, translucent, or opaque; it may be colorless or colored. Varieties are classified as crystalline and cryptocrystalline. Crystalline varieties include ordinary colorless crystallized quartz, or rock crystal; rose quartz; yellow quartz, sometimes used as imitation topaztopaz , aluminum silicate mineral with either hydroxyl radicals or fluorine, Al2SiO4(F,OH)2, used as a gem. It is commonly colorless or some shade of pale yellow to wine-yellow; pale blue and pale green also occur, but natural red stones are ..... Click the link for more information. ; smoky quartz, or cairngorm stone; milk-white milky quartz; aventurine quartz, which contains scales of hematite or mica; and amethystamethyst [Gr.,=non-drunkenness], variety of quartz, violet to purple in color, used as a gem. It is the most highly valued of the semiprecious quartzes. It is associated with a number of superstitions, being regarded as a love charm, as a potent influence in improving sleep, and ..... Click the link for more information. . Varieties of cryptocrystalline quartz, the crystal structure of which can be seen only under the microscope, if at all, are chalcedonychalcedony [from Chalcedon], form of quartz the crystals of which are so minute that its crystalline structure cannot be seen except with the aid of a microscope. Chalcedony has a waxy luster and is translucent to transparent. ..... Click the link for more information. , flintflint, variety of quartz that commonly occurs in rounded nodules and whose crystal structure is not visible to the naked eye. Flint is dark gray, smoky brown, or black in color; pale gray flint is called chert. ..... Click the link for more information. , hornstone, and chert. Colored varieties of chalcedony known by special names are carneliancarnelian or cornelian , variety of red chalcedony, used as a gem. It is distinguished from sard by the shade of red, carnelian being bright red and sard brownish. The red coloring is apparently caused by iron oxide. ..... Click the link for more information. , sard, chrysoprase, agateagate , translucent, cryptocrystalline variety of quartz and a subvariety of chalcedony. Agates are identical in chemical structure to jasper, flint, chert, petrified wood, and tiger's-eye, and are often found in association with opal. ..... Click the link for more information. , onyxonyx , variety of cryptocrystalline quartz, differing from agate only in that the bands of which it is composed are parallel and regular. Its appearance is most striking when the bands are of sharply contrasting colors; black and white specimens are often used for cameos. ..... Click the link for more information. , sardonyx, and jasperjasper, opaque, impure cryptocrystalline quartz, usually red, but also yellow, green, and grayish blue. It is used as a gem. Ribbon jasper has the colors in stripes. ..... Click the link for more information. . Clastic quartzes are sandsand, rock material occurring in the form of loose, rounded or angular grains, varying in size from .06 mm to 2 mm in diameter, the particles being smaller than those of gravel and larger than those of silt or clay. ..... Click the link for more information. and sandstonesandstone, sedimentary rock formed by the cementing together of grains of sand. The usual cementing material in sandstone is calcium carbonate, iron oxides, or silica, and the hardness of sandstone varies according to the character of the cementing material; quartz sandstones ..... Click the link for more information. .Quartz a mineral. The term “quartz” is applied to two crystalline modifications of silicon dioxide, SiO2: hexagonal quartz (or α-quartz), which is stable at a pressure of 1 atm (or 100 kilonewtons per square meter) at temperatures ranging from 573° to 870°C, and trigonal (β-quartz), which is stable at temperatures below 573°C. The β-quartz is most abundant in nature, and it crystallizes in the trigonal-trapezohedral class of the trigonal system. The crystalline structure of the skeletal forms of quartz consists of silica tetrahedrons placed helically (with a right or left twist) in relation to the main axis of the crystal. Depending on this placement, a distinction is made between right-handed and left-handed structural morphological crystal forms. These forms are externally differentiated by the symmetry of the placement of certain faces (for example, the trapezohedron). The absence of planes and a center of symmetry in quartz crystals results in the piezoelectric and pyroelectric properties of quartz. Most often, quartz crystals have an elongated prismatic appearance with the predominant development of the faces of the hexagonal prism and two rhombohedrons (the crystal head). More rarely, the crystals assume the appearance of a pseudohexagonal dipyramid. Externally, regular quartz crystals are usually complexly twinned, most frequently forming twinned sections according to the Brazil law or Dauphiné law. Dauphiné twins arise not only with the growth of the crystals but also as a consequence of internal structural rearrangements. These rearrangements, in turn, are the result of mechanical deformations and thermal α— β inversions accompanied by compression. The color of quartz crystals, grains, and aggregates varies widely. Colorless, milky-white, or gray varieties of quartz are most common. Transparent or semitransparent attractively colored crystals have been given individual names. For example, the colorless or transparent ones are called rock crystals, purple crystals are known as amethyst, smoky colored crystals are known as smoky quartz, black crystals are called morion, and golden yellow crystals are called citrine. Variety in color usually results from structural defects with replacement of Si4+ by Fe3+ or Al3+ by the simultaneous inclusion of Na1+, Li1+, or (OH)1- in the matrix. Multicolored quartz is also encountered, caused by microinclusions of foreign minerals. For example, green prase has inclusions of actinolite or chlorite microcrystals, and golden sparkling aventurine has inclusions of mica or hematite. The cryptocrystalline varieties of quartz—agate and chalcedony—consist of minute fibrous formations. Quartz is optically uniaxial and positive. The indexes of refraction (for daylight, λ = 589.3) are ne = 1.553 and n0= 1.544. Quartz is transparent for ultraviolet and partially infrared rays. In passing a plane-polarized light beam in the direction of the optical axis, left-handed quartz crystals rotate the polarization plane to the left, and right-handed crystals to the right. In the visible part of the spectrum, the angle of rotation (for the thickness of a 1-mm quartz plate) varies from 32.7° (for λ 486 nm) to 13.9° (λ 728 nm). The dielectric permittivity (єij), the piezoelectric modulus (djj), and the coefficients of elasticity (Sij) are, respectively (at room temperature), є11 = 4.58 and є33 - 4.70,d11 = -6.76 X 10-8 and d14 =2.56 X 10-8, and S11 = 1.279, S12 = -0.159,S13 = -0.110, S14 = -0.446, S33= 0.956,and S44 = 1.978. The coefficients of linear expansion are 13.4 X 10-6 perpendicular to the threefold axis and 8 X 10-6 parallel to it. The heat of inversion for β—α quartz equals 2.5 kilocalories per mole (10.45 kilojoules per mole). Quartz has a hardness of 7 on the mineralogical scale and a density of 2,650 kg/m3. It melts at a temperature of 1710°C and upon cooling forms quartz glass. Fused quartz is a good insulator; the resistance of a cube with a 1-cm edge at 18°C equals 5 X 1018 Ω/cm, and the coefficient of linear expansion is 0.57 X 10-6 cm/°C. An economically feasible method has been developed for growing monocrystals of synthetic quartz. The crystal is obtained from aqueous solutions of SiO2 at high pressures and temperatures (hydrothermal synthesis). The synthetic quartz crystals possess such valuable technical properties as stable piezoelectric properties, radiation stability, and high optical uniformity. Natural quartz is a common mineral and an essential constituent of many rocks and of mineral deposits of the most diverse origin. Industrially, the most important quartz materials are quartz sand, quartzite, and monocrystalline quartz. The last is rarely encountered and is highly valued. In the USSR the most important quartz crystal deposits are located in the Urals, the Ukrainian SSR (Volyn’), the Pamir, and the Aldan River basin. Abroad, quartz deposits are found in Brazil and the Malagasy Republic. Quartz sand is an important raw material of the ceramic and glass industries. Quartz monocrystals are used in radio engineering (piezoelectric frequency stabilizers, filters, resonators, piezoplates in ultrasound units). Quartz is also used in optical instruments (prisms for spectrographs and monochromators, lenses for ultraviolet optics). Fused quartz is used in the manufacture of special chemical vessels. Quartz is also used for obtaining pure silicon. Transparent colored varieties of quartz are considered as semiprecious stones and are widely used in jewelry-making. REFERENCESShubnikov, A. V. Kvarts i ego primenenie. Moscow-Leningrad, 1940. Laz’ko, E. M. Ogenezise khrustalenosnykh obrazovanii i promyshlennykh tipakh mestorozhdenii p’ezokvartsa. Moscw, 1958. (Tr. Vsesoiuznogon.-i. in-ta mineral’nogo syr’ia, vol. 2, issue 1.)V. P. BUTUZOV quartz[kwȯrts] (mineralogy) SiO2 A colorless, transparent rock-forming mineral with vitreous luster, crystallizing in the trigonal trapezohedral class of the rhombohedral subsystem; hardness is 7 on Mohs scale, and specific gravity is 2.65; the most abundant and widespread of all minerals. quartzThe most abundant form of mineral silica; very hard, will scratch glass.quartz a colourless mineral often tinted by impurities, found in igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic rocks. It is used in the manufacture of glass, abrasives, and cement, and also as a gemstone; the violet-purple variety is amethyst, the brown variety is cairngorm, the yellow variety is citrine, and the pink variety is rose quartz. Composition: silicon dioxide. Formula: SiO2. Crystal structure: hexagonal QuartzThe graphics subsystem in the Mac OS X operating system. It provides two-dimensional drawing and windowing, and its rendering engine is based on the Adobe PDF model. See Mac OS X. See also quartz crystal.quartz
quartz (kwōrts), A crystalline form of silicon dioxide used in chemical apparatus and in optic and electric instruments.quartz Drug slang A regionally popular street term for smokable methamphetamine or crack cocaine. Vox populi Silica, see there.quartz (kwōrts) A crystalline form of silicon dioxide used in chemical apparatus and in optic and electrical instruments. quartz (kwōrts) A crystalline form of silicon dioxide used in chemical apparatus and in optic and electrical instruments. AcronymsSeeQTZquartz Related to quartz: rose quartzSynonyms for quartznoun colorless glass made of almost pure silicaSynonyms- lechatelierite
- quartz glass
- vitreous silica
- crystal
Related Words- natural glass
- silica
- silicon dioxide
- silicon oxide
noun a hard glossy mineral consisting of silicon dioxide in crystal formRelated Words- quartz crystal
- atomic number 14
- Si
- silicon
- mineral
- rock crystal
- transparent quartz
- cairngorm
- smoky quartz
- amethyst
- calcedony
- chalcedony
- citrine
- rose quartz
- silica
- silicon dioxide
- silicon oxide
- aventurine
- sunstone
- common topaz
- false topaz
- topaz
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