:''Silica redirects here. For other uses, see
Silica (disambiguation)''
The
chemical compound 'silicon dioxide', also known as 'silica' or 'silox' (from the
Latin "
silex"), is the
oxide of
silicon,
chemical formula , and has been known for its hardness since the 16th century. It is a principal component of most types of
glass and substances such as
concrete.
'Siliceous' is an adjective meaning "related to silica".
Manufactured forms
Silica is manufactured in several forms including:
★
glass (a colorless, high-purity form is called ''
fused silica'')
★ synthetic amorphous silica
★
silica gel (used e.g. as
desiccants in new clothes and leather goods)
It is used in the production of various products.
★ Inexpensive
soda-lime glass is the most common and typically found in drinking glasses, bottles, and windows.
★ A raw material for many whiteware ceramics such as
earthenware,
stoneware and
porcelain.
★ A raw material for the production of
Portland cement.
★ A
food additive, primarily as a flow agent in powdered foods, or to absorb water (see the ingredients list for).
★ The natural ("native") oxide coating that grows on
silicon is hugely beneficial in
microelectronics. It is a superior
electric insulator, possessing high chemical stability. In electrical applications, it can protect the silicon, store charge, block current, and even act as a controlled pathway to allow small currents to flow through a device. At room temperature, however, it grows extremely slowly, and so to manufacture such oxide layers on silicon, the traditional method has been the deliberate heating of silicon in high temperature furnaces within an oxygen ambient (
thermal oxidation).
★ Raw material for
aerogel in the
Stardust spacecraft
★ Used in the extraction of DNA and RNA due to its ability to bind to the nucleic acids under the presence of
chaotropes.
★ Added to medicinal
anti-foaming agent, like
Simethicone, with a small portion to enhance defoaming activity.
Health effects

Manufactured silica fume at maximum surface area of 380m²/g
Inhaling finely divided crystalline silica dust in significant quantities can lead to
silicosis or (much more rarely)
cancer, as the dust becomes lodged in the lungs and continuously irritates them (silica does not dissolve over time). This effect can be an occupational hazard for people working with
sandblasting equipment, products that contain powdered silica, and so on.
In all other respects, silicon dioxide is inert and harmless. When silica is ingested orally, it passes unchanged through the gastrointestinal tract, exiting in the
feces, leaving no trace behind. Small pieces of silicon dioxide are equally harmless, as long as they are not large enough to mechanically obstruct the GI tract, or jagged enough to lacerate its lining. Silicon dioxide produces no fumes and is insoluble ''in vivo.'' It is indigestible, with zero nutritional value and zero toxicity.
Chemistry
Silicon dioxide is formed when silicon is exposed to oxygen (or air). A very thin layer (approximately 1
nm or 10
Ã…) of so-called 'native oxide' is formed on the surface when silicon is exposed to air under ambient conditions. Higher temperatures and alternate environments are used to grow well-controlled layers of silicon dioxide on silicon.
Silicon dioxide has
covalent bonding and forms a
network structure (also known as lattice or continuous).
Silicon dioxide is attacked by
hydrofluoric acid (HF). HF is used to remove or pattern silicon dioxide in the semiconductor industry.
References
★ R. K. Iler, ''The Chemistry of Silica'' (ISBN 0-471-02404-X)
See also
★
Silicon
★
Amorphous carbonia
★
Fused silica
★
Quartz
★
Glass
★
Sand
★
Silicon carbide
★
Mesoporous silica
External links
★ (Tridymite)
★ (Quartz)
★ (Cristobalite)
★
NIOSH Pocket Guide to Chemical Hazards (amorphous)
★
NIOSH Pocket Guide to Chemical Hazards (crystalline, as respirable dust)
★
Quartz SiO2 piezolelctric properties