I've looked around google and searched the forum (I hope I searched it thoroughly enough and won't be flamed to shame), but I can't find an answer to this: How does a crystal react to electricity? There are many circuits for oscillation with crystals, but why exactly does a crystal lend itself to frequency and oscillation? Any help would be greatly appreciated
I've looked around google and searched the forum (I hope I searched it thoroughly enough and won't be flamed to shame), but I can't find an answer to this: How does a crystal react to electricity? There are many circuits for oscillation with crystals, but why exactly does a crystal lend itself to frequency and oscillation? Any help would be greatly appreciated
It's called the piezoelectric effect. If a crystal is stimulated with an electrical charge it will mechanically resonate at a specific frequency, also conversely if the crystal is mechanically stressed it will create an electrical charge.
Here is a start to further research you might take:
It's called the piezoelectric effect. If a crystal is stimulated with an electrical charge it will mechanically resonate at a specific frequency, also conversely if the crystal is mechanically stressed it will create an electrical charge.
Here is a start to further research you might take:
The conditions for oscillation are gain, feedback, and phase shift. You can certainly create oscillators without a crystal. What the crystal does is to enhance certain frequencies and attenuate others. It is precisely the frequencies at the mechanical resonance of the crystal which are enhanced.