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  Home > JCE Print > Journal of Chemical Education > Issues > 2005  > March  >
In the Laboratory
Spectacular Breeding of Crystals on Silica Gel
Ryszard Piekos and Jacek Teodorczyk
Department of Inorganic Chemistry, Faculty of Pharmacy, Medical University of Gdansk, PL-80-416 Gdansk, Poland

Cover
March 2005
Vol. 82 No. 3
p. 448

Abstract
During experiments with silicic acid sols blended with thiosulfate solutions, an interesting phenomenon was observed. Namely, after gelation of the systems and evaporation of excessive water at ambient temperature, the gels cracked and on their surface grasslike offsprings appeared, which continued to grow. A closer inspection of these species showed them to be sodium thiosulfate, slightly less hydrated than the parent salt (pentahydrate). A literature search for explanation of this phenomenon led the authors to a class of minerals known as antholytes, whose representative is a rare mineral chalcanthite, CuSO4•5H2O. Further experiments with CuSO4•5H2O, Cr2(SO4)3•18H2O, Al2(SO4)3•18H2O, NiSO4•7H2O, Na2SO4•10H2O, and (NH4)2SO4 gave similar results. With colorful salts, the ”antholytes“ differed in hydration degree and morphology of crystals as compared to those of the parent salts. These experiments are particularly recommendable for undergraduate students for demonstration of several reactions and phenomena such as preparation of silicic acids by ion-exchange from sodium metasilicate, sol–gel transition, aging of silica gels, preparation of antholytes, and demonstration of the labile nature of monosilicic and thiosulfuric acids.
More Information
*  Citation
Piekos, Ryszard; Teodorczyk, Jacek. J. Chem. Educ. 2005 82 448.
*  Keywords
Crystallography / Crystal Growth; Inorganic Chemistry; Materials Science; silica*; sol-gel transition*
*  History
Created:
Last Updated:
February 2, 2005
February 16, 2005
  Home > JCE Print > Journal of Chemical Education > Issues > 2005 > March > Page 448


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