Maximum Drive Voltage for Quartz Crystals: How Much Is Too Much?

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Applying high voltage to quartz crystals raises concerns about their structural integrity, as excessive voltage could lead to cracking. The piezoelectric effect allows crystals to generate significant voltage from minimal force, but the relationship between applied voltage and crystal deformation is nonlinear. While quartz crystals can withstand some voltage, exceeding a few thousand volts may cause fractures, especially under high-frequency pulses. Manufacturers provide specifications for maximum drive voltage to ensure safe operation. Understanding these limits is crucial for applications involving quartz crystals, particularly in sensitive devices like watch crystals.
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When it comes to the piezoelectric effect you can have a small quartz crystal and apply a force to it and get thousands of volts as a result. But if you took a quartz crystal and applied a thousand volts to it, would it just crack? For a quartz crystal to take a couple thousand volts charge (no current applied to the quartz just voltage) would it have to have a larger size to take the extra voltage. I'm thinking the higher the voltage applied to the crystal the more the molecules move.
 
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When you apply stress or deform certain crystals they produce an electrical potential across the crystals lattice. When you apply a potential across a crystals lattice, you get the reverse. The crystal will change it's shape.

 
Yes but can a quartz crystal withstand a large voltage in the couple thandsands of volts range. From what I was researching the crystal only moves around a nanometer when a voltage is applied. but does that movement increase to a larger amount when the voltage is increased? With a high enough voltage will the crystal break?
 
I'm no expert on piezoelectric crystals but I believe the change in length is a nonlinear funciton of voltage. I would also think high frequency pulses might create fractures.
 
"I would also think high frequency pulses might create fractures."

I wonder if you could cause the crystal to crack (perhaps on an extremely small scale) through resonance in this manner.
 
I suspect that if you applied kV to a quartz crystal it would fracture.

The manufacturers list maximum drive voltage in their specifications.

Watch crystals are particularly sensitive, being designed to work with very low power levels.
 
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