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... And bigger crystals in space.


. . . and bigger crystals in space

The date March 30, 1992, already means a lot to chemical engineer Albert Sacco Albert Sacco, Jr. (born May 3, 1949) is an American astronaut and chemical engineer who flew as the Payload Specialist on the Space Shuttle Columbia on shuttle mission STS-73 in 1995.  Jr., of the Worcester (Mass.) Polytechnic Institute. That's when shuttle flight STS-53 is scheduled to launch crystallization Crystallization

The formation of a solid from a solution, melt, vapor, or a different solid phase. Crystallization from solution is an important industrial operation because of the large number of materials marketed as crystalline particles.
 experiments dreamed up eight years ago by Sacco and a now-deceased friend. Moreover, as a mission-specialist candidate, Sacco himself may fly into space that day.

The experiments involve zeolites, a class of labyrinthine lab·y·rin·thine
adj.
Of, relating to, resembling, or constituting a labyrinth.



labyrinthine

pertaining to or emanating from a labyrinth.
 crystals with catalytic, porous porous /por·ous/ (por´us) penetrated by pores and open spaces.

po·rous
adj.
1. Full of or having pores.

2. Admitting the passage of gas or liquid through pores.
 networks, used in such technological applications as "cracking" large petroleum molecules into the smaller ones that make up gasoline. On Earth, gravity, vibrations, temperature fluctuations and other factors limit chemists to growing micron-sized zeolite zeolite

Any member of a family of hydrated aluminosilicate minerals that have a framework structure enclosing interconnected cavities occupied by large metal cations (positively charged ions)—generally sodium, potassium, magnesium, calcium, and barium—and water
 particles.

Space, in theory, should be nearly free of crystal-wrecking factors. But previous efforts to grow crystals in space have yielded mixed results, Sacco says. In most cases, more tiny crystals formed rather than a few larger crystals.

He and his co-workers have now developed a chemical trick, which they hope will enhance crystal growth at the expense of crystal number. By adding metal-binding molecules such as tetraethanolamine (TEA) to the crystallization solution, the researchers can continuously regulate the amount of an aluminum-containing zeolite constituent, Sacco says. TEA grabs on to these constituents and, like a time-release capsule capsule

In botany, a dry fruit that opens when ripe. It splits from top to bottom into separate segments known as valves, as in the iris, or forms pores at the top (e.g., poppy), or splits around the circumference, with the top falling off (e.g., pigweed and plantain).
, frees only small amounts of them at a time. The freed aluminum constituents, he says, add to an already initiated zeolite crystal more readily than they help to initiate a new crystal.
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Copyright 1990, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:crystallization experiments
Author:Amato, Ivan
Publication:Science News
Date:Dec 15, 1990
Words:237
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