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Structure of Minerals

Structure of Minerals. All minerals are crystalline The atoms are arranged in a regular pattern A crystal is a regular geometric solid with smooth surfaces called crystal faces The orderly arrangement of ions determines the shape of the crystal. Crystal Structure.

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Structure of Minerals

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  1. Structure of Minerals • All minerals are crystalline • The atoms are arranged in a regular pattern • A crystal is a regular geometric solid with smooth surfaces called crystal faces • The orderly arrangement of ions determines the shape of the crystal.

  2. Crystal Structure • Each kind of mineral has its own crystal form. • Halite (NaCl) typically forms a crystal in the shape of a cube • Quartz (SiO2) may form long, regular six sided crystals. • The angles at which crystal faces meet is always the same for each kind of mineral. • To describe these shapes crystallographic axes are used. They are drawn perpendicular to crystal faces.

  3. Six Crystal Systems

  4. Silica Tetrahedron • More than 90% of the minerals in Earth’s crust are members of a mineral family called silicates. • They are compounds of silicon and oxygen plus one or more metallic element such as aluminum or iron • In all silicates the basic building block is four O atoms packed closely around a Si atom, held together by covalent bonds. • The basic unit forms a silica tetrahedron • Silicates are classified according to the way the tetrahedrons are linked. Fig 3.16 p. 40

  5. Crystals and Physical Properties • The orderly arrangement of the atoms or ions helps explain the other properties of the mineral. • A mineral is a solid because of the close packing of its ions or atoms and the strong forces of attraction between them • The hardness of a mineral depends on the arrangement of its ions or atoms • Carbon forms diamond, the hardest natural mineral. • Carbon also forms graphite, a very soft mineral that flakes easily • Carbon atoms are arranged in layers or sheets in the graphite structure.

  6. Diamond and Graphite Diamond structure

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