Quote: Originally posted by unionised |
Similarly, since the complex silicate in that paper is made by precipitation, it must be less soluble than copper hydroxide. |
In which paper? Not in the one you posted. There it is made by a classical hydrothermal reaction (10 <i>days</i> at 230° under autogenous
pressure - this is not a precipitation reaction). Hydrothermal in alkaline medium is the method to grow these huge 30 cm quartz crystals. With
hydrothermal you can't simply argue via solubility. It's a crazy world of its own.
God knows what the gel looks like - it certainly is not a defined compound and highly depends on the gel growth conditions, as usual with sol/gel
chemistry. Not that it matters once you autoclave it in alkaline medium.
Quote: | Also, do you agree with my assessment that they didn't actually analyse the gel and that you can't use that composition as evidence of anything?
|
Yes indeed, they put the <i>whole</i> thing in an autoclave and give the molar ratios for reproducibility. Again: this is NOT a
precipitation reaction. I'm pretty sure that if you introduce solid CuSO4, NaOH, silica gel and some water in an autoclave you would likewise grow
these crystals (or other Cu/Na-silicates).
Also what does "complex" silicate mean? At least structurally this thing looks very simple. |