This tenth volume completes the first series of "Growth of Crystals,"
which began in 1957. The sources of the volumes are as follows: for Vol.
I, the 1st All-Union Conference on Crystal Growth; for Vol. 3, the 2nd;
and for Vols. 5 and 6, the 3rd; Vols. 7 and 8 reported the International
Symposium on Crystal Growth at the Seventh International Crystallography
Con gress, and Vol. 9 the 1969 symposium on crystal growth dedicated to
E. S. Fedorov; Vols. 2, 4, and 10 did not originate in conferences. The
main problem that largely occupied the conferences and symposia and also
the inter mediate volumes was that of real crystal formation, as well as
the relation of crystal growth theory to practical crystal production.
This tenth volume, which completes this first series, is to a
considerable extent a survey. It contains more extensive theoretical and
experimental original papers, as well as some shorter papers dealing
with particular but important aspects of real crystal formation. The
volume opens with a paper by V. V. Voronkov, which deals with the
structure of crystal surface in Kossel's model. The model as proposed by
Kossel is extremely simple. It deals qualitatively with the basic trends
in the growth of an idealized crystal in its own va por at absolute
zero, and naturally does not allow one to perform quantitative studies
on com plex real processes."