Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Enamel crystals characteristics

Hydroxyapatite (with some carbonate inclusions) is the most stable of the possible calcium phosphate salts that can be formed under physiological conditions. However, it is not the most rapid one to form. Instead, octacalcium phosphate (OCP) will precipitate more readily than hydroxyapatite. This led Brown in 1987 to propose that, as the kinetically favoured compound, OCP precipitates first, and then undergoes irreversible hydrolysis to a transition product OCP hydrolyzate [68]. This hypothesis is consistent with the observation that enamel comprises hydroxyapatite crystals that have the long, plate-like morphology that is generally considered characteristic of OCP crystals [69]. Overall, it seems that enamel crystals, with their elongated form, result from early precipitation of OCP, which forms a template on which hydroxyapatite units grow epitaxially [70,71]. This leads to enamel mineralisation with the observed thin, ribbon-like structure of crystals. [Pg.342]

Barium nitrate is prepared by reaction of BaCO and nitric acid, filtration and evaporative crystallization, or by dissolving sodium nitrate in a saturated solution of barium chloride, with subsequent precipitation of barium nitrate. The precipitate is centrifuged, washed, and dried. Barium nitrate is used in pyrotechnic green flares, tracer buUets, primers, and in detonators. These make use of its property of easy decomposition as well as its characteristic green flame. A small amount is used as a source of barium oxide in enamels. [Pg.481]

Enamel contains well-oriented apatite crystallites, of sizes up to 1 nm in maximum dimension (Elliott, 2002). Ultra-high-resolution photos of thin sections of developing enamel show the unmistakable hexagonal outlines of apatite (Figure 31(A)). Powder X-ray diffraction analysis which can be used to accurately identify the crystal structural characteristics of any solid shows that the material is clearly apatite and that there is preferred orientation of the crystallites. These... [Pg.4036]


See other pages where Enamel crystals characteristics is mentioned: [Pg.318]    [Pg.318]    [Pg.268]    [Pg.268]    [Pg.273]    [Pg.237]    [Pg.292]    [Pg.438]    [Pg.65]    [Pg.802]    [Pg.405]    [Pg.454]    [Pg.796]    [Pg.408]    [Pg.420]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.318 ]




SEARCH



Crystal characteristics

Crystallization characteristics

Crystallizers characteristics

Enamel

Enamel, enamelling

Enameling

Enamels crystal

© 2024 chempedia.info