DETAILS OF THE 1999
CRYSTAL GROWING COMPETITION

Sponsored by the
CHEMICAL INSTITUTE OF CANADA'S
NATIONAL CHEMISTRY WEEK

Here you will learn how this year's contest was conducted.

Francais


Year 2001 Contest


PAST RESULTS

1998 - Canada-Wide

1999 - International

1999 - Canada-Wide

1999 - Wellington-Waterloo

1996-1999 Canada-Wide Cumulative


STEP ONE - REGISTER

This contest is open to any high school student in Canada

Contact your Local Area Coordinator to let him/her know that you are participating.

If you are unsure of who your coordinator is, contact The Wizard
(also known as Dr. Chris Young) at:

E-mail youngjc@em.agr.ca or
Phone 519 767-5012 or
FAX 519 837-9472 or
Backup E-mail thewiz@sentex.net


STEP TWO - GET YOUR STARTING MATERIAL

This year we will be using copper (II) sulfate pentahydrate (also known as Blue Stone) kindly donated by Anachemia Science.

To order your material, call Anachemia directly at 1-800-361-0209 and ask for Part Number AC2675 - 500g Cupric Sulfate pentahydrate - ACS grade. They will ship 500 g of copper sulfate directly to you FOR FREE!

AS OF OCTOBER 27, 1999 NO MORE ORDERS WILL BE ACCEPTED.

NOTE: Only teachers may order material, which must be shipped directly to a school.

If you need more material (for possible reason, see below) order it at the same time. Note however that you will be billed later for the extra (about $12/package - the suppliers cost).


STEP THREE - PREPARE YOUR CRYSTAL(s)

You are free to use any procedure you like to prepare crystals. For your convenience, suggested seed crystal growing procedures followed by detailed instructions are provided here.

Also included is background information and links to other web sites on crystals and general approaches to growing crystals.

RULE 1

The MAXIMUM AMOUNT of starting material that may be used for each given crystal is LIMITED to 150 g. The 500 g supplied is sufficient for preparation of three crystals.

However there is no limit to the number of students asssigned to a team, nor is there a limit to the number of teams permitted at a given school.

RULE 2

So that all students across the country have an equal preparation time, crystal production must conclude within five weeks after receipt of starting material.


SOLUBLILTY of CUPRIC SULFATE
Temp deg C
g CuSO4/100 g H2O
0
31.6
100
203.3

[Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, 45th Ed (1964-5)]


STEP 4 - HAVE YOUR CRYSTAL(s) JUDGED

Make arrangements with your Local Coordinator for your best crystal(s) to be judged.

Each school is encouraged to submit only one crystal to the Local Coordinator. It is recognized that where several crystals from a school may be of roughly equivalent over-all quality, and it is difficult to make a choice, it may be necessary to submit several crystals. Of these several crystals from a particular school, only one may be the "official" crystal to be considered for all prize(s) awarded locally.

Nominally, we would like to have the crystals judged early in National Chemistry Week (October 17-23, 1999), so that the winners can be displayed later in the week.

However, there may be unforseen delays in getting starting material to schools. Then, at the discretion of the Local Coordinator, judging may have to take place at a later time.

In November, the best crystal from each Local Area will be sent for judging at the National Level. A Trophy and cash prizes are given to the students preparing the best crystals.


JUDGING CRITERIA

The idea is to grow a SINGLE CRYSTAL, not a bunch of crystals. It is therefore essential to avoid excessive rapid growth, which encourages the formation of multiple crystals, not a single crystal.

The best single crystal will be judged on the basis of mass and quality as outlined below.

The quality is judged by experts who will rank the crystal on a scale of 0-10. A score of 10 will be given to a perfect gem quality crystal which fits the ideal crystal structure known for the chemical.

1. The crystal is weighed, and the mass M recorded.

2. The quality of the crystal is judged on a scale of 1 to 10, with 10 representing a perfect crystal. The following factors will be considered in judging quality:
a) match/mismatch with crystal type (out of 2)
b) presence/absence of occlusions (out of 2)
c) intact/broken edges (out of 2)
d) well formed/misformed faces (out of 2)
e) clarity/muddiness (out of 2)

Total Quality Q = x.xx (out of 10)

3. The total score is then determined as follows:

Total Score = [log (M+1)] x Q x 10

The logarithm of the mass is chosen so that large poor quality crystals don't swamp out smaller good quality crystals.
The value 1 is added to the mass so that crystals weighing less than 1 g get a positive score.

The crystal with the highest score is the winning crystal.

This score is nearly an absolute score that could be used to judge different types of crystals. The term "nearly" must be added, since the absolute score will depend upon how much starting material was used. For example:

In the 1998 NCW Contest the maximum mass would have been 201 g. A crystal that heavy that scores a perfect 10 on quality would get
[log (201+1)] x 10 x 10 = 230
the highest possible score.

The best crystal that year scored
[log (57+1)] x 9.80 x 10 = 172.8
or 85.1 % of theoretical maximum.

In one other contest we know about, the maximum allowable amount of starting material is 500 g. A perfect crystal from there would get
[log (500 +1)] x 10 x 10 = 270
and a 250 g crystal scoring 9.5 would get
[log (250 + 1)] x 9.5 x 10 = 228
or 84.4% of maximum.

In this example, the smaller crystal would get a slightly higher score.


NEED MORE STARTING MATERIAL?

Obviously, the 500 g of starting material supplied will be insufficient where there are more than three teams at a school. If a school wishes greater participation, then the school will have to obtain more material on their own.

This can be done by purchasing extra from Anachemia at the time of ordering. You will be invoiced later by the Chemical Institute of Canada.


Here is what the final crystal should look like
(without the spots):

GOOD LUCK!


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