05 - Exm256
05 - Exm256
05 - Exm256
Group
Silicates
Carbonates
Mostly gangue
Rock forming
Native elements
Sulphides
Ores
Sulphosalts
Oxides
Halides
Sulphates
Phosphates
Borates
Nitrates
Tungstates
Goldschmidt classification
H He C N
F P Cl Ar
Br Kr I Xe
O
Li Be B Na Mg
Al Si K Ca Sc Ti V Cr
Mn Ga Rb Sr Y Zr Nb
Cs Ba Hf Ta
Fe
The classification
is very loose
Ge Ru Rh Pd
Sn W Re Os Ir
Pt Au
S Cu Zn As
Co Ni
Mo
Se Ag Cd In
Sb Te Hg Tl
Pb Bi
Native elements
Very uncommon in Earths crust rare and valuable
(except graphite significant rock forming mineral)
Type
Minerals
Metals
S, C (graphite, diamond)
Gold
Au (usually pure, or with some Ag, Cu, or other metals)
Isometric, a = 4.0786, Z=4
Crystals : octahedra, dodecahedra, cubes, flakes or nuggets)
Hardness : 2.5-3
S.G. = 19.3
Cleavage : None. Malleable, sectile.
Lustre : Metallic
Colour : Yellow (if pure), lighter with Ag, reddish with Cu. Opaque
Streak : Same as colour
Silver
Ag (often pure, may contain Au or other metals)
Isometric, a = 4.0862, Z=4
Crystals : uncommon, arborescent or wire-like forms, scales, plates or fracture fillings
Hardness : 2.5-3
S.G. = 10.1-11.1
Cleavage : None. Malleable, sectile, ductile.
Lustre : Metallic
Colour : White, often with gray/black tarnish. Opaque
Streak : Same as colour
Copper
Cu (usually pure, may contain some Au or some other metals/semimetals)
Isometric, a = 3.615, Z=4
Crystals : Rare, cubic or dodecahedral
Hardness 2.5-3
S.G. = 8.95
Cleavage : None. Malleable, sectile.
Lustre : Metallic
Colour : Light rose (on fresh surface), rapidly tarnishes to red. Opaque
Streak : Same as colour
Platinum
Pt (usually pure, less often alloyed with Ir, Os, Ru)
Isometric, a = 3.9231, Z=4
Crystals : Rare, cubic close packed
Hardness 4-4.5
S.G. = 19
Cleavage : None. Malleable, ductile.
Lustre : Metallic
Colour : Whitish steel gray to dark grey
Streak : Same as colour
Gold fineness
800 fine = 80% of Au
990 (two nines fine) = 99.0% of Au
999 (three nines fine) = 99.9% of Au
Six nines fine finest gold ever produced (Perth Mint 1957)
999.9 (for nines fine) = 24 carats
Sulphide structure
derived from metal : sulphur ratio
M2X
M3X2
excess metal
excess metal
Ag2S, Cu2S
MX
MX2
M2S3
monosulphides
disulphides
MX3
Most common
sulphides
Peacock
ore
Monosulphides
Galena PbS Most important source of lead, important ore of Ag
Cubic a = 5.936, Z = 4 (cubes, octahedrons)
H 2.5 SG 7.58
Lead-gray colour & streak, bright metallic lustre
Perfect cleavage {001, 010, 100}, brittle
Unit cell
4 formula units
Cleavage
Polished section
(white, pink tint)
Monosulphides
Sphalerite ZnS -- The most important ore for Zn (always contains some Fe)
Cubic a = 5.406, Z=4 (most often tetrahedral crystals, also cubes, dodecahedrons)
H 3.5-4 SG 3.9-4.1
Colour : pale yellow, light brown, brown
black (also red, green, white)
darker with Fe content
Lustre : Resinous, adamantine,
submetallic
Streak : White to light/medium brown (Fe)
Perfect dodecahedral cleavage. Brittle.
Cleavage
Polished section
Galena
Sphalerite
structure comparison
Cubic lattice
Z=4
a = 5.936
Radius ratio Pb:S=1.19:1.72=0.692
a = 5.406
Radius ratio Zn:S=0.68:1.72=0.395
Monosulphides
Chalcopyrite CuFeS2 Principal source for Cu
Tetragonal a = 5.281, c = 10.401 (two ZnS cells stacked atop each other)
H 3.5-4 SG 4.1-4.3
Colour : Brass yellow
Lustre : Metallic
Streak : Greenish black
Cleavage : Poor on {011} and {111}.
Brittle, uneven fracture.
Zn4S4
Cu2Fe2S4
Zn4S4
Cu2Fe2S4
Derivative structure
Cu or Fe may occupy
additional
tetrahedral sites,
yielding
stoichiometries like
Cu9Fe8S16 or Cu8Fe10S16
Consequence of
metallic bonding
Cu2FeSnS4
Monosulphides
Niccolite (nickeline) NiAs -- simple structure from which pyrrhotite is derived
Rhombohedral unit cell, three together form hexagonal shape
a = 3.61 c = 5.02 Z=2
H 5-5.5 SG 7.78
Colour : Pale copper-red
Lustre : Metallic
Streak : Brownish black
Top view of
3 niccolite unit cells
stacked together
Monosulphides
Pyrrhotite Fe(1-x)S -- Ore for Fe, mined for associated Ni, Cu, Pt
Structure derived from niccolite; troilite FeS has the same structure as NiAs
Monoclinic or hexagonal depends on Fe content
Occurrence histogram
Pyrrhotite structure can be explained by
systematic removal of Fe atoms from troilite
Monosulphides
Cinnabar HgS -- Principal source of mercury
Hexagonal structure, H 2-2.5 SG 8.18
Colour : Red
Lustre : Adamantine
Streak : Scarlet
Perfect cleavage {100}
Disulphides
Pyrite FeS2 Secondary ore for Fe, source of S, mined for associated Cu, Au
Cubic a = 5.418 , Z=4
structure of NaCl, Fe replacing Na, covalently bonded doublets S-S replacing Cl
H 6-6.5 SG 5.02
Colour : Bronze yellow
Lustre : Metallic
Streak : Greenish/brownish black
No cleavage. Brittle.
Most common sulphide
Disulphides
Molybdenite MoS2 Principal ore for Mo
Hexagonal a = 3.16, c = 12.295 (hexagonal plates/prisms)
H 1-1.5 SG 4.62-4.73
Colour : Lead gray
Lustre : Metallic
Streak : Bluish/greenish gray
Cleavage : Perfect on {001}. Brittle. Sectile.
Semiconductor
Disulphides
Arsenopyrite FeAsS Principal source of As
Monoclinic (marcasite structure with half of S replaced by As)
H 5.5-6 SG 6.07
Colour : Silver white to steel gray
Lustre : Metallic
Streak : Black
Cleavage : Poor on {101}. Brittle.
Very often associated with gold (refractory)
As : S ratio variable
0.9:11 to 1.1:0.9
Some Co may substitute Fe ->
Glaucodot (Co,Fe)AsS
Gersdorffite
NiAsS
FeAsS
Arsenopyrite
CoAsS
Cobaltite
(Co,Fe)AsS
Alloclassite
Glaucodot
ZnS
NiAs
FeS2
Metal
excess
Galena
PbS
Sphalerite
ZnS
Niccolite
NiAs
Pyrite
FeS2
Chalcocite
Cu2S
Molybdenite
MoS2
(layers)
Altaite
PbTe
Greenockite
CdS
Pyrrhotite
Fe(1-x)S
Marcasite
FeS2
Digenite
Cu9S5
Stibnite
Sb2S3
(ring)
Alabandite
MnS
Chalcopyrite
CuFeS2
(derived)
Breithauptite
NiSb
Arsenopyrite
FeAsS
Djurleite
Cu31S16
Bismuthinite
Bi2S3
(ring)
Stannite
Cu2FeSnS4
(derived)
Troilite
FeS
(meteorites)
Cobaltite
(Co,Fe)AsS
Bornite
Cu5FeS4
Violarite
FeNi2S4
(thiospinnel)
Lllingite
FeAs2
Pentlandite
(Fe,Ni)9S8
Others
Oxides
Oxygen is most abundant element in Earths crust. Most of it is tied with second
abundant element silicon to form silicates.
-> Oxide minerals (albeit abundant) as accessory minerals.
Several oxides are important ore minerals of some metals (Fe, Cr, Ti, Mn, Cu, Zn, Al, Mg)
Oxide minerals
X2O and XO group
Cuprite
Cu2O
Haematite
Fe2O3
Periclase
MgO
Corundum
Al2O3
Zincite
ZnO
Ilmenite
FeTiO3
Magnetite
FeFe2O4
Rutile
TiO2
Chromite
FeCr2O4
Cassiterite
SnO2
Spinel
MgAl2O4
Pyrolusite
MnO2
Chrysoberyl
BeAl2O4
Uraninite
UO2
Franklinite (Zn,Fe,Mn)(Fe,Mn)2O4
Tantalite (Fe,Mn)Ta2O6
X2O group
Cuprite Cu2O -- Copper ore
Cubic a = 4.27, Z=2 Crystals are octahedrons, cubes, dodecahedrons or combination
H 3.5-4 SG 6.14
Colour : Deep red to brownish red
Lustre : Submetallic to adamantine, earthy
Streak : Brownish red
Cleavage : fair along {1,1,1}. Brittle.
Often associated with green malachite CuCO3(OH)2 and black tenorite CuO
Copper
ruby
XO group
Zincite ZnO -- Minor ore for zinc, used for production of zinc white (oxide)
Hexagonal a = 3.249 c = 5.205, Z=2, structure analogous to wurtzite (ZnS)
H 4 SG 5.68
Colour : Orange yellow to deep red
Lustre : Subadamantine
Streak : Orangish yellow
Cleavage : perfect along {100}
Spinel Series
Magnetite Series
Spinel
MgAl2O4
Magnetite
FeFe2O4
Hercynite
FeAl2O4
Magnesioferrite
MgFe2O4
Gahnite
ZnAl2O4
Ulvspinel
FeFeTiO4
Galaxite
MnAl2O4
Franklinite
ZnFe2O4
Jacobsite
MnFe2O4
Chromite Series
Chromite
FeCr2O4
Trevorite
NiFe2O4
Magnesiochromite
MgCr2O4
Hausmanite
MnMn2O4
Complete solid solutions within a series, partial solid solutions between the series
Economic importance good chromite ore requires high ration Cr:Fe
Spinel group
Magnetite Fe3O4 Iron ore
Cubic a = 8.396, Z=8 Crystals octahedral (less common dodecahedrons), often granular
H 5.5-6.5 SG 5.18
Colour : Black
Lustre : Dull metallic
Streak : Black
No cleavage
Attracted by a magnet
Normal spinel
IV
Lodestone
2
Mg2+ VI Al3+
O
2
4
Inverse spinel
IV
Spinel group
Chromite FeCr2O4 The only mineral ore for chromium
Cubic a = 8.38, Z=8 Crystals octahedrons, cubic faces, commonly granular
H 5.5-6 SG 5.09
Colour : Black
Lustre : Submetallic
Streak : Brown
No cleavage. Brittle.
Weakly magnetic.
Iron rose
Haematite group
Corundum Al2O3 Gemstones, sapphire, abrasive
Hexagonal trigonal a = 4.75, c = 12.98, Z=6, Crystals commonly hexagonal prisms
H 9 SG 3.98-4.02
Colour : White/gray/blue, red (ruby), blue (sapphire)
Lustre : Vitreous to adamantine
No cleavage. Brittle.
High melting point -- 2044C
Ruby
Sapphire
Haematite group
Ilmenite FeTiO3 Major mineral ore for titanium
Hexagonal trigonal a = 5.089, c = 14.09, Z=6 Tabular parallels, with hex cross sections
H 5-6 SG 4.7-4.8
Colour : Black
Lustre : Metallic
Streak : Black
No cleavage. Brittle.
Solid solutions
FeTiO3
MgTiO3
MnTiO3
Rutile structure
Edge-sharing chains of octahedra
Fibrous rutile
TiO2 is polymorphic
Anatase
Brookite
Tetragonal
Orthorhombic
FeTi2O5
Fe2TiO5
Fe2TiO4
FeO
Fe3O4
Monoclinic
Ilmenite reduction leads to
synthetic rutile
FeTiO3 + CO Fe + CO2 + TiO2
TiO2
FeTiO3
Akaogiite
Fe2O3
XO2 group
Cassiterite SnO2 Principal ore of tin
Tetragonal, a = 5.468, c = 3.188, Z=2, Isostructural with rutile
H 6-7 SG 6.9-7.1
Colour : Yellowish or reddish brown
Lustre : Adamantine
Streak : Grayish or brownish white
Cleavage : Imperfect on {100}, poor on {110} and {111}
Radioactive
Summary
Metallic ores consist mainly of native metals, sulphides and oxides
Native metals -- mainly the precious metals; metallic bonding & lustre;
high conductivity
Sulphides mainly base metals; a few simple sulphide structure type dominates;
high degree of metallic (+ covalent) bonding; metallic lustre;
significant conductivity
More complex sulphides are mostly derivative structures of the simple types
Oxides dominated by ionic bonding;
lack metallic properties of metals & sulphides