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  2. Silicate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silicate

    The name is also used for any salt of such anions, such as sodium metasilicate; or any ester containing the corresponding chemical group, such as tetramethyl orthosilicate. [1] The name "silicate" is sometimes extended to any anions containing silicon, even if they do not fit the general formula or contain other atoms besides oxygen; such as ...

  3. Potassium silicate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potassium_silicate

    Potassium silicate is the name for a family of inorganic compounds. The most common potassium silicate has the formula K 2 SiO 3, samples of which contain varying amounts of water. These are white solids or colorless solutions. [1]

  4. Sodium silicate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sodium_silicate

    Sodium silicate is a generic name for chemical compounds with the formula Na 2x Si y O 2y+x or (Na 2 O) x · (SiO 2) y, such as sodium metasilicate (Na 2 SiO 3), sodium orthosilicate (Na 4 SiO 4), and sodium pyrosilicate (Na 6 Si 2 O 7). The anions are often polymeric. These compounds are generally colorless transparent solids or white powders ...

  5. Sodium metasilicate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sodium_metasilicate

    Sodium metasilicate is the chemical substance with formula Na 2 SiO 3, which is the main component of commercial sodium silicate solutions. It is an ionic compound consisting of sodium cations Na +

  6. Silicate mineral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silicate_mineral

    A silicate mineral is generally an inorganic compound consisting of subunits with the formula [SiO 2+n] 2n−.Although depicted as such, the description of silicates as anions is a simplification.

  7. Silicate perovskite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silicate_perovskite

    The existence of silicate perovskite in the mantle was first suggested in 1962, and both MgSiO 3 and CaSiO 3 had been synthesized experimentally before 1975. By the late 1970s, it had been proposed that the seismic discontinuity at about 660 km in the mantle represented a change from spinel structure minerals with an olivine composition to silicate perovskite with ferropericlase.

  8. Calcium silicate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calcium_silicate

    Unit cell of Ca 2 SiO 4.Color code: red (O), blue (Ca), gold (Si). As verified by X-ray crystallography, calcium silicate is a dense solid consisting of tetrahedral orthosilicate (SiO 4 4-) units linked to Ca 2+ via Si-O-Ca bridges.

  9. Beryl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beryl

    The word beryl – Middle English: beril – is borrowed, via Old French: beryl and Latin: beryllus, from Ancient Greek βήρυλλος bḗryllos, which referred to a 'precious blue-green color-of-sea-water stone'; [2] from Prakrit veruḷiya, veḷuriya 'beryl' [8] [a] which is ultimately of Dravidian origin, maybe from the name of Belur or ...