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单词 gypsum
释义

gypsum


gyp·sum

G0328600 (jĭp′səm)n. A widespread colorless, white, or yellowish mineral, CaSO4·2H2O, used in the manufacture of plaster of Paris, various plaster products, and fertilizers.
[Middle English gipsum, from Latin gypsum, from Greek gupsos, probably of Semitic origin; akin to Arabic jibs, jiṣṣ, jaṣṣ, from Akkadian gaṣṣu.]

gypsum

(ˈdʒɪpsəm) n (Minerals) a colourless or white mineral sometimes tinted by impurities, found in beds as an evaporite. It is used in the manufacture of plaster of Paris, cement, paint, school chalk, glass, and fertilizer. Composition: hydrated calcium sulphate. Formula: CaSO4.2H2O. Crystal structure: monoclinic[C17: from Latin, from Greek gupsos chalk, plaster, cement, of Semitic origin] gypseous adj gypsiferous adj

gyp•sum

(ˈdʒɪp səm)

n. a soft mineral, hydrous calcium sulfate, CaSO4∙2H2O, occurring in massive or fibrous form and also as alabaster and selenite: used to make plaster of Paris and as a fertilizer. [1640–50; < Latin < Greek gýpsos chalk, gypsum]

gyp·sum

(jĭp′səm) A colorless, white, or pinkish mineral consisting of calcium sulfate. Gypsum occurs as individual blade-shaped crystals or as massive beds in sedimentary rocks. It is used in manufacturing plasterboard, cement, and fertilizers. It is the mineral used to represent a hardness of 2 on the Mohs scale.

gypsum

- From Semitic, a relative or ancestor of Arabic jibs and Hebrew gephes, "plaster."See also related terms for plaster.

gypsum

A mineral or rock composed of calcium sulfate and water.
Thesaurus
Noun1.gypsum - a common white or colorless mineral (hydrated calcium sulphate) used to make cements and plasters (especially plaster of Paris)gypsum - a common white or colorless mineral (hydrated calcium sulphate) used to make cements and plasters (especially plaster of Paris)atomic number 20, Ca, calcium - a white metallic element that burns with a brilliant light; the fifth most abundant element in the earth's crust; an important component of most plants and animalsmineral - solid homogeneous inorganic substances occurring in nature having a definite chemical compositionalabaster - a compact fine-textured, usually white gypsum used for carvinggesso - gypsum or plaster of Paris spread on a surface to make it suitable for painting or gilding (or a surface so prepared)terra alba - finely pulverized gypsum used especially as a pigmentcalcium sulfate, calcium sulphate - a white salt (CaSO4)plaster of Paris, plaster - any of several gypsum cements; a white powder (a form of calcium sulphate) that forms a paste when mixed with water and hardens into a solid; used in making molds and sculptures and casts for broken limbs
Translations

gypsum


gypsum

(jĭp`səm), mineral composed of calcium sulfate (calcium, sulfur, and oxygen) with two molecules of water, CaSO4·2H2O. It is the most common sulfate mineral, occurring in many places in a variety of forms. A transparent crystalline variety is selenite. A massive gypsum of delicate color and texture, readily worked into ornamental vases, boxes, and the like, is called alabaster. A lustrous gypsum with fibrous structure, called satin spar, is used in jewelry and for other ornaments, but it is soft and easily marred. Plaster of Paris, a fine white powder, is produced by heating gypsum to expel the water. If this powder is moistened and then allowed to dry, it becomes hard, or sets. Its major use is in the manufacture of gypsum lath and wall board, and for casts and molds. It is widely used for staff, the material of which temporary exposition buildings are made. Uncalcined gypsum is added to Portland cement as a retarder.

Gypsum

 

a mineral, hydrous calcium sulfate CaSO4 · 2H2O; when pure it contains 32.56 percent CaO, 46.51 percent SO3, and 20.93 percent H2O.

Gypsum crystallizes in the monoclinic system. The crystal lattice structure of gypsum is of the layer type. Double layers consist of tetrahedra (SO4) joined through calcium. Crystals are tabular, acicular (single or twinned, so-called swallow-tailed), needle-shaped, and fibrous. Gypsum is found mainly as continuous granular (alabaster) and fibrous (selenite) masses and as various crystal groups (such as gypsum rosettes). Pure gypsum is colorless and transparent; if impurities are present, it can be gray, yellowish, pinkish, brown, or other colors. The mineralogical-scale hardness is 1.5, density 2,300 kg/m3, and solubility 2.05 g per liter at 20° C (maximum between 32° and 41° C). It is precipitated from aqueous solutions rich in sulfates (in the drying up of marine lagoons and salt lakes). Gypsum is precipitated at relatively low salinity; when the salinity is raised, anhydrous calcium sulfate, or anhydrite, starts developing instead, followed by salts. Because of this effect, gypsum is often found with anhydrite, more rarely with halite and other salts. Many deposits were formed through hydration of anhydrite. The main gypsum formations are of the sedimentary type and are widely distributed in deposits of varying age. In the USSR the largest deposits occur in the Donbas and in Moscow, Kuibyshev, and Perm oblasts, as well as in the Caucasus and Middle Asia. Gypsum is widely used to make cementing materials, gypsum concrete, and articles made from gypsum and gypsum concrete; as sundry-purpose stone (selenite) and lining or facing stone; in making paints, enamels, and glazes; for gypsuming of the soil; and in medicine and optics.

Gypsum is used as the starting material in solutions for making hollow molds from a sculptured original, these molds serving for casting copies from bronze, porcelain, or other materials or from gypsum (details of modeled architectural decoration). Gypsum enters into the composition of ganch (a gypsum-clay mixture) and stucco, and stands up well to assembling and coloring.

REFERENCE

Budnikov, P. P. Gips, ego issledovanie i primenenie, 3rd ed. Moscow-Leningrad, 1943.

V. P. PETROV

gypsum

[′jip·səm] (mineralogy) CaSO4·2H2O A mineral, the commonest sulfate mineral; crystals are monoclinic, clear, white to gray, yellowish, or brownish in color, with well-developed cleavages; luster is subvitreous to pearly, hardness is 2 on Mohs scale, and specific gravity is 2.3; it is calcined at 190-200°C to produce plaster of paris.

gypsum

A soft mineral consisting of a hydrated calcium sulfate from which gypsum plaster is made (by heating); colorless when pure; used as a retarder in portland cement.

gypsum

in egg shaped form, brings good fortune. [Gem Symbolism: Kunz, 80]See: Luck, Good

gypsum

a colourless or white mineral sometimes tinted by impurities, found in beds as an evaporite. It is used in the manufacture of plaster of Paris, cement, paint, school chalk, glass, and fertilizer. Composition: hydrated calcium sulphate. Formula: CaSO4.2H2O. Crystal structure: monoclinic
AcronymsSeeGPSM

gypsum


Related to gypsum: gypsum board
  • noun

Words related to gypsum

noun a common white or colorless mineral (hydrated calcium sulphate) used to make cements and plasters (especially plaster of Paris)

Related Words

  • atomic number 20
  • Ca
  • calcium
  • mineral
  • alabaster
  • gesso
  • terra alba
  • calcium sulfate
  • calcium sulphate
  • plaster of Paris
  • plaster
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