Sulfate Mineral
sulfate mineral, sulfate also spelled Sulphate, any naturally occurring salt of sulfuric acid. About 200 distinct kinds of sulfates are recorded in mineralogical literature, but most of them are of rare and local occurrence. Abundant deposits of sulfate minerals, such as barite and celestite, are exploited for the preparation of metal salts. Many beds of sulfate minerals are mined for fertilizer and salt preparations, and beds of pure gypsum are mined for the preparation of plaster of paris.
name
colour
lustre
Mohs hardness
specific gravity
alum
colourless; white
vitreous
2–2½
1.8
alunite
white; grayish, yellowish, reddish, reddish brown
vitreous
3½–4
2.6–2.9
alunogen
white; yellowish or reddish
vitreous to silky
1½–2
1.8
anglesite
colourless to white; often tinted gray, yellow, green, or blue
adamantine to resinous or vitreous
2½–3
6.4
anhydrite
colourless to bluish or violet
vitreous to pearly
3½
3.0
antlerite
emerald to blackish green; light green
vitreous
3½
3.9
barite
colourless to white; also variable
vitreous to resinous
3–3½
4.5
botryogen
light to dark orange red
vitreous
2–2½
2.1
brochantite
emerald to blackish green; light green
vitreous
3½–4
4.0
caledonite
deep verdigris green or bluish green
resinous
2½–3
5.8
celestite
pale blue; white, reddish, greenish, brownish
vitreous
3–3½
4.0
chalcanthite
various shades of blue
vitreous
2½
2.3
coquimbite
pale violet to deep purple
vitreous
2½
2.1
epsomite
colourless; aggregates are white
vitreous; silky to earthy (fibrous)
2–2½
1.7
glauberite
gray; yellowish
vitreous to slightly waxy
2½–3
2.75–2.85
gypsum
colourless; white, gray, brownish, yellowish (massive)
subvitreous
2 (a hardness standard)
2.3
halotrichite
colourless to white
vitreous
1.5
1.7 (pick) to 1.9 (halo)
jarosite
ochre yellow to dark brown
subadamantine to vitreous; resinous on fracture
2½–3½
2.9–3.3
kainite
colourless; gray, blue, violet, yellowish, reddish
vitreous
2½–3
2.2
kieserite
colourless; grayish white, yellowish
vitreous
3.5
2.6
linarite
deep azure blue
vitreous to subadamantine
2.5
5.3
mirabilite
colourless to white
vitreous
1½–2
1.5
plumbojarosite
golden brown to dark brown
dull to glistening or silky
soft
3.7
polyhalite
colourless; white or gray; often salmon pink from included iron oxide
vitreous to resinous
3.5
2.8
thenardite
colourless; reddish, grayish, yellowish, or yellow brown
vitreous to resinous
2½–3
2.7
name
habit
fracture or cleavage
refractive indices
crystal system
alum
columnar or granular massive
conchoidal fracture
n = 1.453–1.466
isometric
alunite
granular to dense massive
conchoidal fracture
omega = 1.572
epsilon = 1.592
hexagonal
alunogen
fibrous masses and crusts
one perfect cleavage
alpha = 1.459–1.475
beta = 1.461–1.478
gamma = 1.884–1.931
triclinic
anglesite
granular to compact massive; tabular or prismatic crystals
one good, one distinct cleavage
alpha = 1.868–1.913
beta = 1.873–1.918
gamma = 1.884–1.931
orthorhombic
anhydrite
granular or fibrous massive; concretionary (tripestone)
two perfect, one good cleavage
alpha = 1.567–1.580
beta = 1.572–1.586
gamma = 1.610–1.625
orthorhombic
antlerite
thick tabular crystals
one perfect cleavage
alpha = 1.726
beta = 1.738
gamma = 1.789
orthorhombic
barite
usually in tabular crystals; rosettes (desert roses); massive
one perfect, one good cleavage
alpha = 1.633–1.648
beta = 1.634–1.649
gamma = 1.645–1.661
orthorhombic
botryogen
reniform, botryoidal, or globular aggregates
one perfect, one good cleavage
alpha = 1.523
beta = 1.530
gamma = 1.582
monoclinic
brochantite
prismatic to hairlike crystal and crystal aggregates; granular massive; crusts
one perfect cleavage
alpha = 1.728
beta = 1.771
gamma = 1.800
monoclinic
caledonite
coating of small elongated crystals
one perfect cleavage
alpha = 1.815–1.821
beta = 1.863–1.869
gamma = 1.906–1.912
orthorhombic
celestite
tabular crystals; fibrous massive
one perfect, one good cleavage
alpha = 1.618–1.632
beta = 1.620–1.634
gamma = 1.627–1.642
orthorhombic
chalcanthite
short prismatic crystals; granular masses; stalactites and reniform masses
conchoidal fracture
alpha = 1.514
beta = 1.537
gamma = 1.543
triclinic
coquimbite
prismatic and pyramidal crystals; granular massive
omega = 1.536
epsilon = 1.572
hexagonal
epsomite
fibrous or hairlike crusts; woolly efflorescences
one perfect cleavage
alpha = 1.430–1.440
beta = 1.452–1.462
gamma = 1.457–1.469
orthorhombic
glauberite
tabular, dipyramidal, or prismatic crystals
one perfect cleavage
alpha = 1.515
beta = 1.535
gamma = 1.536
monoclinic
gypsum
elongated tabular crystals (some 5 ft long; others twisted or bent); granular or fibrous masses; rosettes
one perfect cleavage
alpha = 1.515–1.523
beta = 1.516–1.526
gamma = 1.524–1.532
monoclinic
halotrichite
aggregates of hairlike crystals
conchoidal fracture
alpha = 1.475–1.480
beta = 1.480–1.486
gamma = 1.483–1.490
monoclinic
jarosite
minute crystals; crusts; granular or fibrous massive
one distinct cleavage
omega = 1.82
epsilon = 1.715
hexagonal
kainite
granular massive; crystalline coatings
one perfect cleavage
alpha = 1.494
beta = 1.505
gamma = 1.516
monoclinic
kieserite
granular massive, intergrown with other salts
two perfect cleavages
alpha = 1.520
beta = 1.533
gamma = 1.584
monoclinic
linarite
elongated tabular crystals, either singly or in groups
one perfect cleavage; conchoidal fracture
alpha = 1.809
beta = 1.839
gamma = 1.859
monoclinic
mirabilite
short prisms; lathlike or tabular crystals; crusts or fibrous masses; granular massive
one perfect cleavage
alpha = 1.391–1.397
beta = 1.393–1.410
gamma = 1.395–1.411
monoclinic
plumbojarosite
crusts, lumps, compact masses of microscopic hexagonal plates
one fair cleavage
omega = 1.875
epsilon = 1.786
hexagonal
polyhalite
fibrous to foliated massive
one perfect cleavage
alpha = 1.547
beta = 1.560
gamma = 1.567
triclinic
thenardite
rather large crystals; crusts, efflorescences
one perfect, one fair cleavage
alpha = 1.464–1.471
beta = 1.473–1.477
gamma = 1.481–1.485
orthorhombic
All sulfates possess an atomic structure based on discrete insular sulfate (SO42-) tetrahedra, i.e., ions in which four oxygen atoms are symmetrically distributed at the corners of a tetrahedron with the sulfur atom in the centre. These tetrahedral groups do not polymerize, and the sulfate group behaves as a single negatively charged molecule, or complex. Thus, sulfates are distinct from the silicates and borates, which link together into chains, rings, sheets, or frameworks.
Sulfate minerals can be found in at least four kinds: as late oxidation products of preexisting sulfide ores, as evaporite deposits, in circulatory solutions, and in deposits formed by hot water or volcanic gases. Many sulfate minerals occur as basic hydrates of iron, cobalt, nickel, zinc, and copper at or near the source of preexisting primary sulfides. The sulfide minerals, through exposure to weathering and circulating water, have undergone oxidation in which the sulfide ion is converted to sulfate and the metal ion also is changed to some higher valence state. Noteworthy beds of such oxidation products occur in desert regions, such as Chuquicamata, Chile, where brightly coloured basic copper and ferric iron sulfates have accumulated. The sulfate anions generated by oxidation processes may also react with calcium carbonate rocks to form gypsum, CaSO4·2H2O. Sulfates formed by the oxidation of primary sulfides include antlerite [Cu3(SO4)(OH)4], brochantite [Cu4(SO4)(OH)6], chalcanthite [Cu2+(SO4)·5Η2Ο], anglesite (PbSO4), and plumbojarosite [PbFe3+6(SO4)4(OH)12].
Soluble alkali and alkaline-earth sulfates crystallize upon evaporation of sulfate-rich brines and trapped oceanic salt solutions. Such brines can form economically important deposits of sulfate, halide, and borate minerals in thick parallel beds, as the potash deposits at Stassfurt, Ger., and the southwestern United States. Many of the sulfate minerals are salts of more than one metal, such as polyhalite, which is a combination of potassium, calcium, and magnesium sulfates.
Sulfate minerals common in evaporite deposits include anhydrite, gypsum, thenardite (Na2SO4), epsomite (MgSO4·7H2O), glauberite [Na2Ca(SO4)2], kainite (MgSO4·KCl·3H2O), kieserite (MgSO4·H2O), mirabilite (Na2SO4·10H2O), and polyhalite [K2Ca2Mg(SO4)4·2H2O].
Groundwater carrying sulfate anions reacts with calcium ions in muds, clays, and limestones to form beds of gypsum. The massive material is called alabaster or plaster of paris (originally found in the clays and muds of the Paris basin). If such beds become deeply buried or metamorphosed (altered by heat and pressure), anhydrite may form by dehydration of the gypsum.
Numerous sulfates, usually simple, are formed directly from hot aqueous solutions associated with fumarolic (volcanic gas) vents and late-stage fissure systems in ore deposits. Noteworthy examples include anhydrite, barite, and celestine.
What's Your Reaction?