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Mineral Composition Variability

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Presentation on theme: "Mineral Composition Variability"— Presentation transcript:

1 Mineral Composition Variability
GLY 4200 Fall, 2012

2 Ionic Substitution - Size
Size: Fe2+ ↔ Mg2+ ↔ Ni2+ (0.86Å) (0.80Å) (0.77Å)

3 Ionic Substitution - Charge
Coupled substitution Ca2+ & A13+ ↔ Na+ and Si 4+ Example: Plagioclase feldspar NaAlSi3O8 ↔ CaAl2Si2O8 Void Ca2+ & Void ↔ 2 Na+

4 Victor M. Goldschmidt Swiss-born Norwegian mineralogist and petrologist who laid the foundation of inorganic crystal chemistry and founded modern geochemistry Born 1888, died 1947 More Information: Source:

5 Goldschmidt’s Rules - Size
Atomic substitution is controlled by size (i.e., radii) of the ions Free substitution can occur if size difference is less than ~15% Limited substitution can occur if size difference is % Little to no substitution can occur if size difference is greater than 30% If there is a small difference of ionic radius the smaller ion enters the crystal preferentially Source:

6 Goldschmidt’s Rules - Charge
Atomic substitution is controlled by charge of the ions --> cannot differ by more than 1 For ions of similar radius but different charges, the ion with the higher charge enters the crystal preferentially

7 Other Factors Affecting Solid Solution
Temperature Minerals expand at higher T Minerals contract at lower T Greater tolerance for ionic substitution at higher T Pressure Increasing pressure causes compression Less tolerance for ionic substitution at higher P Availability of ions – ions must be readily available for substitution to occur

8 Spin State High-spin versus low-spin
Source: High-spin versus low-spin

9 Solid Solution Source: and

10 Types of Crystalline Solution
1. Substitutional - Mg2+ for Fe2+ 2. Omission Ca2+ & void for 2 Na+

11 Crystalline Substitution 2
3. Vacancy - normally vacant sites can be filled as part of a coupled substitution. An important example is in the mineral group amphibole. An abundant, end-member component of this group of minerals is tremolite which ideally has the formula: []Ca3Mg5Si8O22(OH)2 where [] represents a vacant crystallographic site. Minerals can utilize this vacant site in coupled substitutions such as: [] + Si4+ = Na+ + Al3+

12 Crystalline Substitution 3
4. Interstitial - Atom or ion occupies space in between the normal sites Often this is H+, a very small cation In some crystal structures these voids are channel-like cavities.  A good example is the mineral beryl (Be3Al2Si6O18) Image:

13 Beryl Cavities

14 Schottky Defect Source:

15 Frenkel defect Source:

16 HCP Stacking Defect ABABABCABAB H H C H H

17 CCP Stacking Defect ABCABCABABCABC C C H C C

18 Grain Boundary Defect Two lattices grow together, with some displacement of ions (shown in blue) Source:

19 Polymorphous Minerals
Source: All have the formula Al2SiO5

20 Ditypous Minerals Top – sphalerite (aka zinc blende) CCP
Bottom – wurzite HCP Source:

21 Pseudomorphism Pseudomorphic goethite after cubic pyrite crystals clustered on a terminated aegerine crystal Group is 4.6cm Eric Farquharson specimen Source:

22 Mineraloids Upper left –amber Lower left – obsidian
Sources: Upper left: Lower left: Right: Upper left –amber Lower left – obsidian Right – tektite glass

23 Exsolution Augite with pigeonite exsolution lamellae
Pigeonite is a Ca-poor clinopryoxene Left: Right: Exsolution in pyroxene


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