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crystal

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crystal

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The sodium chloride, or common salt, crystal is a regular cubic array of charged atoms (ions) – positive sodium ions and negative chloride ions. Repetition of this structure builds up into cubic salt crystals.

Regular-shaped solid that reflects light. Examples include diamonds, grains of salt, and sugar. Particles forming a crystal are packed in an exact and ordered pattern. When this pattern is repeated many millions of times, the crystal is formed. Such an arrangement of particles, that is regular and repeating, is called a giant molecular structure.

In ionic compounds, such as sodium chloride (NaCl), the ions are arranged in a giant ionic lattice, with alternate positive and negative ions in a three-dimensional arrangement. The natural shape of the crystal is the same as the arrangement of ions in the lattice. In sodium chloride the ions form a cubic lattice. Hence sodium chloride crystals are cubic. In diamond there is a giant atomic structure made up of carbon atoms covalently bonded to each other in a regular, repeating arrangement throughout the whole of the structure. In metals the atoms are also packed tightly together in a regular pattern. This gives metals like copper a crystalline structure. Metal crystals are called grains.

A mineral can often be identified by the shape of its crystals and the system of crystallization determined. For example, extrusive igneous rock such as basalt contains very small crystals compared with an intrusive igneous rock such as granite. A single crystal can vary in size from a submicroscopic particle to a structure some 30 m/100 ft in length. Crystals fall into seven crystal systems or groups, classified on the basis of the relationship of three or four imaginary axes that intersect at the centre of any perfect, undistorted crystal.

Crystal

City in Hennepin County, southeastern Minnesota, USA, 11 km/7 mi west of Minneapolis; population (1990) 23,800. A residential suburb of Minneapolis, the post-war wave of suburban development brought a housing boom and one of the first shopping malls in the Twin Cities area.

Crystal was originally a community of market-garden farmers.



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? Mentioned in ? References in classic literature
 
He could tell you of the vanished estate of Sir Peter Bone, long since cut up for building, and how that magnate ruled the country-side when it was country-side, of shooting and hunting, and of caches along the high road, of how "where the gas-works is" was a cricket-field, and of the coming of the Crystal Palace.
Follow yonder green path till it leads you into a little grassy glade, where is a crystal well and a hut of woven boughs hard by, and you shall see her whom you seek.
In a cylindrical bracelet of gold about my wrist was my Barsoomian chronometer--a delicate instrument that records the tals and xats and zodes of Martian time, presenting them to view beneath a strong crystal much after the manner of an earthly odometer.
 
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