Polymorphs of silicon dioxide: Difference between revisions
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→Related: added * Gemstone like compound |
→More commonly known SiO2 gemstones: added link to page Neo-polymorphs |
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* Common [[Quartz]] | * Common [[Quartz]] | ||
* amorphous forms (properties similar to: chalcedon, opal, obsidian, ...) <br>[[mechanosynthesis]] would allow for synthesis of '''pseudo amorphous configurations''' | * amorphous forms (properties similar to: chalcedon, opal, obsidian, ...) <br>[[mechanosynthesis]] would allow for synthesis of '''pseudo amorphous configurations''' <br> [[Neo-polymorph]]s | ||
== Especially interesting since unusually hard and dense == | == Especially interesting since unusually hard and dense == | ||
Revision as of 12:50, 20 April 2021
More commonly known SiO2 gemstones
- Common Quartz
- amorphous forms (properties similar to: chalcedon, opal, obsidian, ...)
mechanosynthesis would allow for synthesis of pseudo amorphous configurations
Neo-polymorphs
Especially interesting since unusually hard and dense
- Stishovite –– may be transitionable into other gemstomes with the same rutile structure forming pseudo phase diagrams
- Seifertite –– (scrutinyte structure)
Both are metastable very hard and very dense.
They may not be very resilient against high temperatures.
Other polymorphs of SiO2
- (wiki-TODO: add some known ones)