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Precipitated

Precipitated is the past participle of the verb precipitate. In general usage, it can describe something that has been caused to occur suddenly, or more precisely, that has been brought about abruptly or prematurely. In chemistry, precipitated describes a solid that forms and separates from a liquid solution as a result of a chemical reaction or a change in conditions such as concentration, temperature, or pH. The solid formed is called a precipitate, while the process is precipitation. Precipitation is common in qualitative analysis, industrial crystallization, water treatment, and mineral formation. Typical examples include silver chloride forming when solutions of silver ions and chloride ions are mixed, or calcium sulfate precipitating in hard-water conditions. After formation, precipitates may be filtered, washed, and dried; their properties depend on the lattice structure and impurities.

In broader science and everyday language, precipitated can describe events that were brought about with speed

Etymology: precipitate comes from Latin praecipitare, to throw down. The adjective sense emphasizes that something has

or
inevitability,
for
example,
a
policy
change
precipitating
economic
effects.
In
meteorology,
precipitation
refers
to
any
form
of
water—rain,
snow,
sleet,
or
hail—that
falls
from
the
atmosphere;
the
term
precipitated
is
not
typically
used
to
describe
such
rain,
but
related
phrases
describe
the
timing
of
events
that
precipitate
weather
patterns.
been
produced
as
a
solid
phase,
often
as
a
result
of
a
reaction.