Wisbech Save The Children. Connecting...
Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Aye, a saturated solution of copper (II) sulphate.
If made saturated at high temperature ( ie. close yo boiling), then as it cools, it becomes super-saturated.
This is a (fairly) stable state unless you add something it can crystallise on - called a nucleus of crystallisation. In our case, we normally dip a small crystal of copper (II) sulphate into the saturated solution, suspended from a bit of cotton tied to a pencil - et voila, your CuSO4 crystal grows.
And you can do the same thing with a saturated sugar solution and make rock candy :-)
http://www.exploratorium.edu/cooking/candy/recipe-rockcandy.html#
There are loads of differnt ways to grow crystals, the one you would choose would depend on how big you want the crystal to be and what the material it. The most common way is to make a saturated solution of the material in a suitable solvent and then let the solvent evapourate off - this gradually produces a super-saturated solution and therefore results in crystal growth.....Sounds like you are remembering copper sulphate.