Hopper – Like cubic, but outer portions of cubes grow faster than inner portions creating a concavity

Common examples include: halite, calcite, synthetic bismuth

Crystals of halite : Trona, San Bernardino Co., California, USA

hopper crystal is a form of crystal, the shape of which resembles that of a pyramidal hopper container.

The edges of hopper crystals are fully developed, but the interior spaces are not filled in. This results in what appears to be a hollowed out step lattice formation, as if someone had removed interior sections of the individual crystals. In fact, the “removed” sections never filled in, because the crystal was growing so rapidly that there was not enough time (or material) to fill in the gaps. The interior edges of a hopper crystal still show the crystal form characteristic to the specific mineral, and so appear to be a series of smaller and smaller stepped down miniature versions of the original crystal.

Hoppering occurs when electrical attraction is higher along the edges of the crystal; this causes faster growth at the edges than near the face centers. This attraction draws the mineral molecules more strongly than the interior sections of the crystal, thus the edges develop more quickly. However, the basic physics of this type of growth is the same as that of dendrites but, because the anisotropy in the solid–liquid inter-facial energy is so large, the dendrite so produced exhibits a faceted morphology.

Hoppering is common in many minerals, including lab-grown bismuthgalenaquartz (called skeletal or fenster crystals), goldcalcitehalite (salt), and water (ice).

In 2017, Frito-Lay filed for (and later received) a patent for a salt cube hopper crystal. Because the shape increases surface area to volume, it allows people to taste more salt compared to the amount actually consumed.

References

Bismuth is a chemical element that has the symbol Bi and atomic number 83. This is a bismuth crystal, that may be synthetic (see Hopper crystal).
Galena Locality: Clausthal-Zellerfeld, Harz Mts, Lower Saxony, Germany (Locality at mindat.org) This specimen is perhaps hundreds of years old – I have seen them like this only in old books like Sowerby – never on a piece available for sale! It features sharp galena cubes to 1cm on a matrix of massive galena. The galena crystals are all uniquely hoppered with a metallic luster! Very unusual piece from a classic German galena location. Not just a great location piece but a very neat galena. New York State Museum label included with piece. 7.0 x 4.5 x 3.4 cm

External links

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