Right off the bat, in the first link, about halfway through, it starts pitching you a product called Excellerator and telling you all about their company.
Then they go on to list that their product contains 39.3% silicon, 24% calcium, 1.8% iron, and all the important trace micros. This is clearly a marketing pitch and hardly counts as a credible scientific study even if it was formatted as such (which it wasn't. A set of results isn't enough).
The second link is from a company called nutrifert which sells the product Amorsil Max, listed in the figure showing the differences in roots with and without their product. I looked up that product and it says it's 72% SiO2 equivalent, 11.5% calcium, and 45% potassium oxide equivalent. Because of this, their informative document lacks all credibility as well.
For the reference, a properly formatted scientific study will include a theory, hypothesis, a description of the apparatus, results, and a conclusion based on the results. A study isn't a bunch of anecdotes, even if the anecdotes come from seemingly credible sources, and posting only results in a marketing paper does not adequately describe the apparatus.