Dictionary Definition
quartz
Noun
1 colorless glass made of almost pure silica
[syn: quartz
glass, vitreous
silica, lechatelierite, crystal]
2 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
impurities
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
German QuarzPronunciation
Noun
Related terms
Translations
mineral
- Bosnian: kvarc
- Bulgarian: кварц
- Croatian: kvarc
- Czech: křemen
- Dutch: kwartz
- Estonian: kvarts
- Finnish: kvartsi
- French: quartz
- German: Quarz
- Greek: χαλαζίας
- Hindi: क्वार्टज़ g Hindi
- Hungarian: kvarc
- Italian: quarzo
- Japanese: 水晶 (すいしょう, suishō)(as gem), 石英 (せきえい, sekiei)(as mineral)
- Latvian: kvarcs
- Polish: kwarc
- Romanian: cuart
- Russian: кварц (kvarts)
- Serbian:
- Spanish: cuarzo
- Turkish: kuvars
Extensive Definition
Quartz (from German
Quarz) is the most abundant mineral in the Earth's continental
crust (although feldspar is more common in the
world as a whole). It is made up of a lattice
of silica () tetrahedra. Quartz has a
hardness of 7 on the Mohs scale and
a density of 2.65
g/cm³.
Crystal habit
Quartz belongs to the rhombohedral crystal system. The ideal crystal shape is a six-sided prism terminating with six-sided pyramids at each end. In nature quartz crystals are often twinned, distorted, or so intergrown with adjacent crystals of quartz or other minerals as to only show part of this shape, or to lack obvious crystal faces altogether and appear massive. Well-formed crystals typically form in a 'bed' that has unconstrained growth into a void, but because the crystals must be attached at the other end to a matrix, only one termination pyramid is present. A quartz geode is such a situation where the void is approximately spherical in shape, lined with a bed of crystals pointing inward.Varieties
Pure quartz is colorless or white, colored
varieties include rose quartz, amethyst, smoky quartz, milky
quartz, and others. Quartz goes by an array of different names. The
most important distinction between types of quartz is that of
macrocrystalline (individual crystals visible to the unaided eye)
and the microcrystalline or
cryptocrystalline
varieties (aggregates of crystals visible only under high
magnification). Chalcedony is a
generic term for cryptocrystalline quartz. The cryptocrystalline
varieties are either translucent or mostly opaque, while the
transparent varieties tend to be macrocrystalline.
Although many of the varietal names historically
arose from the color of the mineral, current scientific naming
schemes refer primarily to the microstructure of the mineral. Color
is a secondary identifier for the cryptocrystalline minerals,
although it is a primary identifier for the macrocrystalline
varieties. This does not always hold true.
Synthetic and artificial treatments
Not all varieties of quartz are naturally occurring. Prasiolite, an olive colored material, is produced by heat treatment; natural prasiolite has also been observed in Lower Silesia in Poland. Although citrine occurs naturally, the majority is the result of heat-treated amethyst. Carnelian is widely heat-treated to deepen its color.Due to natural quartz being so often twinned,
much of the quartz used in industry is synthesized. Large, flawless
and untwinned crystals are produced in an autoclave via the hydrothermal
process; emeralds
are also synthesized in this fashion. While these are still
commonly referred to as quartz, the correct term for this material
is silicon
dioxide.
Occurrence
Quartz occurs in hydrothermal veins and pegmatites. Well-formed crystals may reach several meters in length and weigh hundreds of kilograms. These veins may bear precious metals such as gold or silver, and form the quartz ores sought in mining. Erosion of pegmatites may reveal expansive pockets of crystals, known as "cathedrals."Quartz is a common constituent of granite, sandstone, limestone, and many other
igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic
rocks.
Related silica minerals
Tridymite and cristobalite are high-temperature polymorphs of SiO2 that occur in high-silica volcanic rocks. Coesite is a denser polymorph of quartz found in some meteorite impact sites and in metamorphic rocks formed at pressures greater than those typical of the Earth's crust. Stishovite is a yet denser and higher-pressure polymorph of quartz found in some meteorite impact sites. Lechatelierite is an amorphous silica glass SiO2 which is formed by lightning strikes in quartz sand.History
The name "quartz" comes from the German "Quarz", which is of Slavic origin (Czech miners called it křemen). Other sources insist the name is from the Saxon word "Querkluftertz", meaning cross-vein ore.Quartz is the most common material identified as
the mystical substance maban in
Australian Aboriginal mythology. It is found regularly in
passage tomb cemeteries in Europe in a burial context, eg. Newgrange or
Carrowmore in
the Republic
of Ireland. The Irish word
for quartz is grian cloch, which means 'stone of the sun'.
Roman naturalist Pliny the
Elder believed quartz to be water ice, permanently frozen after great
lengths of time. (The word "crystal" comes from the Greek word for
ice.) He supported this idea by saying that quartz is found near
glaciers in the Alps, but not on volcanic mountains, and that large
quartz crystals were fashioned into spheres to cool the hands. He
also knew of the ability of quartz to split light into a spectrum. This idea persisted
until at least the 1600s.
Nicolas
Steno's study of quartz paved the way for modern crystallography. He
discovered that no matter how distorted a quartz crystal, the long
prism faces always made a perfect 60 degree angle.
Charles
Sawyer invented the commercial quartz crystal manufacturing
process in Cleveland,
Ohio, United
States. This initiated the transition from mined and cut quartz
for electrical appliances to manufactured quartz.
Quartz's piezoelectric properties
were discovered by Jacques and
Pierre
Curie in 1880. The quartz
oscillator or resonator was first developed by Walter
Guyton Cady in 1921
http://www.hrw.com/science/si-science/chemistry/careers/quartz/inventors/cady.html.
George Washington Pierce designed and patented quartz crystal
oscillators in 1923
http://www.hrw.com/science/si-science/chemistry/careers/quartz/inventors/pierce.html.
Warren Marrison created the first quartz oscillator clock based on
the work of Cady and Pierce in 1927
http://www.hrw.com/science/si-science/chemistry/careers/quartz/inventors/clock.html.
Quartz crystals are rotary polar (see rotary
polarization) and have the ability to rotate the plane of
polarization of light passing through them. They are also highly
piezoelectric, becoming polarized with a negative charge on one end
and a positive charge on the other when subjected to pressure. They
will vibrate if an alternating electric current is applied to them.
This proves them to be highly important in commerce for making
pressure gauges, oscillators, resonators and watches.
Piezoelectricity
Quartz crystals have piezoelectric properties, that is they develop an electric potential upon the application of mechanical stress. An early use of this property of quartz crystals was in phonograph pickups. One of the most common piezoelectric uses of quartz today is as a crystal oscillator. The quartz clock is a familiar device using the mineral. The resonant frequency of a quartz crystal oscillator is changed by mechanically loading it, and this principle is used for very accurate measurements of very small mass changes in the quartz crystal microbalance and in thin-film thickness monitors.See also
References
- Hurlbut, Cornelius S.; Klein, Cornelis, 1985, Manual of Mineralogy, 20th ed., ISBN 0-471-80580-7
- Quartz varieties, properties, crystal morphology. Photos and illustrations
- Arkansas quartz, Rockhounding Arkansas
- Gilbert Hart Nomenclature of Silica, American Mineralogist, Volume 12, pages 383-395, 1927
- Mindat.org
- Queensland University of Technology Origin of the word quartz.
- PDF of Charles Sawyer's cultured quartz process description
- Smithsonian Institute, Inventors of quartz oscillating devices
- http://www.webmineral.com/data/Quartz.shtml
- http://www.gemstone.org/gem-by-gem/english/quartz.html
- http://mineral.galleries.com/minerals/silicate/quartz/quartz.htm
- http://mineral.galleries.com/minerals/gemstone/rock_cry/rock_cry.htm
- Terminology used to describe the characteristics of Quartz Crystals when used as oscillators
- http://www.realgems.org/list_of_gemstones/quartz.html RealGems.org Quartz
quartz in Arabic: مرو
quartz in Bosnian: Kvarc
quartz in Bulgarian: Кварц
quartz in Catalan: Quars
quartz in Czech: Křemen
quartz in Danish: Kvarts
quartz in German: Quarz
quartz in Estonian: Kvarts
quartz in Modern Greek (1453-): Χαλαζίας
quartz in Spanish: Cuarzo
quartz in Esperanto: Kvarco
quartz in Persian: کوارتز
quartz in French: Quartz (minéral)
quartz in Galician: Cuarzo
quartz in Korean: 석영
quartz in Croatian: Kvarc
quartz in Indonesian: Kuarsa
quartz in Italian: Quarzo
quartz in Hebrew: קוורץ
quartz in Latvian: Kvarcs
quartz in Luxembourgish: Quarz
quartz in Lithuanian: Kvarcas
quartz in Hungarian: Kvarc
quartz in Macedonian: Кварц
quartz in Malay (macrolanguage): Kuarza
quartz in Dutch: Kwarts
quartz in Japanese: 石英
quartz in Norwegian: Kvarts
quartz in Norwegian Nynorsk: Kvarts
quartz in Polish: Kwarc
quartz in Portuguese: Quartzo
quartz in Romanian: Cuarţ
quartz in Russian: Кварц
quartz in Simple English: Quartz
quartz in Slovak: Kremeň
quartz in Slovenian: Kamena strela
quartz in Serbian: Кварц
quartz in Finnish: Kvartsi
quartz in Swedish: Kvarts
quartz in Thai: ควอตซ์
quartz in Vietnamese: Thạch anh
quartz in Turkish: Kuvars
quartz in Ukrainian: Кварц
quartz in Chinese: 石英