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Properties of silicate minerals. Controls on density , hardness , cleavage and resistance to weathering in nesosilicates. Specific gravity (G) tends to decrease from nesosilicates to tectosilicates, as the degree of tetrahedral polymerization increases. G mineral formula (name)
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Properties of silicate minerals Controls on density, hardness, cleavage and resistance to weathering in nesosilicates
Specific gravity (G) tends to decrease from nesosilicates to tectosilicates, as the degree of tetrahedral polymerization increases. G mineral formula (name) 3.27 Mg2SiO4 (olivine forsterite) 3.58 Mg3Al2(SiO4)3 (garnet pyrope) 3.2 CaMgSi2O6 (diopside pyroxene) 3.0 Ca2Mg7Si8O22(OH)2 (amphibole tremolite ) 2.86 KMg3(AlSi3)O10(OH)2 (mica phlogopite) 2.54 KAlSi3O8 (feldspar) 2.32 SiO2 (cristobalite) 2.65 SiO2 (quartz)
Molar proportions of cations to oxygens First number: cations in C.N.> 4 Second number: cations in C.N. = 4 (network) Third number: oxygen anions Mg2SiO4 (olivine forsterite) 2: 1: 4 Mg3Al2(SiO4)3 (garnet pyrope) 5:3:12 CaMgSi2O6 (pyroxene diopside ) 2:2: 6 Ca2Mg5Si8O22(OH)2 (amphibole) 7:8:22 KMg3(AlSi3)O10(OH)2 (phlogopite) 4:4*:10 KAlSi3O8 (feldspar) 1:4*:8 SiO2 (quartz) 0:1:2
Mg2SiO4 2: 1: 4 = 24:12:48 Mg3Al2(SiO4)3 5: 3:12 = 20:12:48 CaMgSi2O6 2: 2: 6 = 16:16:48 Ca2Mg5Si8O22(OH)2 7: 8:22 = 15:17:48 KMg3(AlSi3)O10(OH)2* 4:4*:10 = 19:19:48 KAlSi3O8 (feldspar) * 1:4*:8 = 6:24:48 SiO2 (quartz) O:1:2 = 0:24:48 * In these minerals, both Al and Si are found in tetrahedra that are sharing corners, so they are counted as network cations.
Mg2SiO4 2: 1: 4 24:12:48 Mg3Al2(SiO4)3 5: 3:12 20:12:48 CaMgSi2O6 2: 2: 6 16:16:48 Ca2Mg5Si8O22(OH)2 2 7: 8:22 15:17:48 KMg3(AlSi3)O10(OH)2 4:4*:10 19:19:48 KAlSi3O8 (feldspar) 1:4*:8 6:24:48 SiO2 (quartz) O:1:2 0:24:48 From neso- to tectosilicates, the direct sharing of oxygen anions among tetrahedra increases. The valence need of oxygen anions are met increasingly by Si4+ or Al3+ ions as you go down the list.
Mg2SiO4 2: 1: 4 24:12:48 Mg3Al2(SiO4)3 5: 3:12 20:12:48 CaMgSi2O6 2: 2: 6 16:16:48 Ca2Mg5Si8O22(OH)2 9: 8:22 19:17:48 KMg3(AlSi3)O10(OH)2 4:4*:10 19:19:48 KAlSi3O8 (feldspar) 1:4*:8 6:24:48 SiO2 (quartz) O:1:2 0:24:48 Reciprocally, the proportion of other cations drops from nesosilicates to tectosilicates. Note their fast drop, much faster than the increasing proportion of cations (Al, Si) in tetrahedral coordination!
viMg2SiO4 2: 1: 4 24:12:48 viiiMg3viAl2(SiO4)3 5: 3:12 20:12:48 viiiCaviMgSi2O6 2: 2: 6 16:16:48 viiiCa2viMg5Si8O22(OH)2 7: 8:22 ~19:17:48 x-xiiKviMg3(AlSi3)O10(OH)2 4:4:10 19:19:48 KAlSi3O8 (feldspar) 1:4:8 6:24:48 SiO2 (quartz) O:1:2 0:24:48 Other cations have lower charges (and higher C.N.) than Si4+ or Al3+ ions in the structure. More moles of these other cations are needed to meet the valence requirement of oxygen anions that are no longer shared by two Si4+ or Al3+ ions.
Mg2SiO4 2: 1: 4 24:12:48 Mg3Al2(SiO4)3 5: 3:12 20:12:48 CaMgSi2O6 2: 2: 6 16:16:48 Ca2Mg5Si8O22(OH)2 7: 8:22 ~19:17:48 KMg3(AlSi3)O10(OH)2 4:4:10 19:19:48 KAlSi3O8 (feldspar) 1:4:8 6:24:48 SiO2 (quartz) O:1:2 0:24:48 This affects G, because cations with lower charge and higher C.N. sit in polyhedra that tend to share more edges and faces than cations with higher charge and lower C.N.These ions pack efficiently.
In quartz (left) and cristobalite (right), SiO44-tetrahedra share all corners. There is “wasted space” between these polyhedra, where small cations could fit. Cristobalite (G = 2.2-2.32) has fewer but larger cages than quartz (G = 2.65).
Zeolites (G 2.0-2.4) have particularly large cages within their tectosilicate network, where large cations or H2O fit.. Stilbite: NaCa2Al5Si13O36•14H2O The same is true of feldspars KAlSi3O8.
Contrast the tectosilicate structures with the structure of the garnet group. Most of the space between the tetrahedra is packed with cations in 6- and 8-fold coordination. viiiA3viB2(ivSiO4) 3 These ions viiiA2+ , viB3+ with lower charges and higher C.N. than ivSi+4 are in larger polyhedra that can share edges or faces. This leads to more efficient packing and higher G values.
Specific gravity (G) tends to decrease from nesosilicates to tectosilicates, as cations with high C.N. are replaced by cations with lower C.N. G mineral formula (name) 3.58 Mg3Al2(SiO4)3 (garnet pyrope) 3.27 Mg2SiO4 (olivine forsterite) 3.2 CaMgSi2O6 (diopside pyroxene) 3.0 Ca2Mg5Si8O22(OH)2 (amphibole tremolite ) 2.86 KMg3(AlSi3)O10(OH)2 (mica phlogopite) 2.54 KAlSi3O8 (feldspar) 2.65 SiO2 (quartz) 2.32 SiO2 (cristobalite) 4.35 SiO2 (stishovite… but Si+4 has C.N. = 6)
HARDNESS and CLEAVAGE cannot be evaluated solely from a mineral formula. One must consider the strength of bonds and the directions along which strong bonds are dominantly oriented. Sometimes, hardness reflects the presence of the weakest bonds, but only these weaker bonds are concentrated along a given plane throughout the structure.
CLEAVAGE reflects either: • Planes across which the weakest bonds are found (in micas, K-O bonds between the sheets) • Planes held by a lower density of bonds (strong or weak doesn’t matter… as in diamond, where octahedral cleavage planes are held by a lower number of strong C-C bonds per area) • AND • bonding character that is dominantly ionic or covalent (rather than metallic)
Some bonds that might be expected to be fairly ionic or covalent turn out to show a strong polarization of the electron cloud. This is often seen in bonding between a relatively small, highly charged ion next to a large, weakly charged ion. NaCl: ionic, good cleavage NaI, AgCl: sectile solids with poor cleavage. (Easier to cut it with a knife than to cleave… a bit like a metallic solid).
Most nesosilicates are rather hard (H = 6 or more) and show poor cleavage because: • their structures distributes the weaker bonds (e.g., Mg-O) fairly evenly among stronger bonds (e.g., Si-O, Al-O); • 2) frequent edge sharing among the larger polyhedra gives high density of bonds across most planes.
Zircon formula: Zr+4Si+4O4 Zr+4 (high charge) (rather large cation, C.N.=8) forms a moderately strong Zr-O bond (e.v. = valence/C.N. = +4/8 = 0.5 ) Si-O bonds are strong (e.v. = +4/4 = 1 ) ZrO8 polyhedra share many edges. Every direction meets a high density of bonds. How many cations does each oxygen bond to? Answer: one Si-O bond and two Zr-O bonds = 2 e.v.
Zircon, ZrSiO4 tetragonal ZrO8 polyhedra share edges with each other and with the SiO4 tetrahedra. H = 7.5 G = 4.68 poor {010} cleavage Zr electronegativity = 1.33 between those of Mg (1.2), Al (1.5)… somewhat ionic.
Minerals which, like zircon, are heavy and resistant to weathering, are found in the sandy sediment of streams. This includes several nesosilicates. Minerals which form at relatively high pressures, in the upper mantle (Mg-rich garnet), are used as indicators for the prospection of diamonds. This is how some of the diamond deposits that are now exploited in Nunavut and northern Quebec were discovered… There were grains of high-pressure minerals in sands that came from the kimberlite pipes.
These characteristics (H6, poor cleavage) make many nesosilicates desirable gemstones, at least in specimens of remarkable colour and transparency. Peridot (gem-quality olivine) Garnet Topaz (careful, that one cleaves easily) Zircon
Olivine structure viMg2SiO4 M1 and M2 octahedra share edges G=3.27, H=6.5, conchoidal fracture chrysotile Mg3Si2O5(OH)4
Olivine in basalt is usually quite close to forsterite, Mg2SiO4… This makes it quite susceptible to weathering, or hydrolysis when it comes in contact with H2O. One common result is chrysotile, Mg3Si2O5(OH)4 This is the origin of the chrysotile asbestos of Thetford Mines.
The garnets viiiA3viB2(ivSiO4) 3 have no specific plane of weakness: Conchoidal Fracture H = 6.5-7.5 The weaker bonds are equally distributed among stronger bonds. In addition, the high density of packing (a lot of edge sharing) offsets the longer weaker bonds that one might expect from having viiiA2+ ions (small charge, high C.N.).
Axes: “a” vertical, “c” horizontal (E-W) Topaz Al2SiO4(F,OH)2 H = 8, G = 3.4 Chains of AlO4F2 octahedra along the c axis (horizontal). The {001} cleavage (vertical) breaks only Al-O and Al-F bonds, no Si-O bonds.
Maany minerals including nesosilicates (* in list below) are used as abrasive materials... to clean graffitis off walls, strip old paint from surfaces prior to repainting, or polish wooden furniture. • silica sand (silica is cheap, but its dust is carcinogenic) • hematite • aluminum oxide • (synthetic, slag) • staurolite* • olivine* • garnet* • diamond
Weak bonds affect the hardness of a mineral if they are predominantly holding planes in one dominant direction. K-O bonds, for example, are present in feldspars and in micas, two mineral groups with very different hardnesses. In each structure, K+-O bonds are the longest, weakest bonds (K+ cation is quite large and has a low charge).
In feldspars, the weak K-O bonds are in cages surrounded by a strong tectosilicate network. K+ ions have little effect on feldspar hardness, but result in good cleavage where planes cut across a lesser density of Al-O and Si-O bonds.
In micas, the K-O bonds are all at the edge of sheets of SiO4 tetrahedra, and hold adjacent sheets together. There are (001) planes parallel to the sheets which cut only these weak bonds.