Spertiniite

(repeating unit)Cu(OH)2IMA symbolSni[1]Strunz classification4.FD.05Dana classification6.2.4.1Crystal systemOrthorhombicCrystal classPyramidal (mm2)
H-M symbol: (mm2)Space groupCmc21Unit cella = 2.95 Å, b = 10.59 Å
c = 5.27 Å; Z = 4IdentificationFormula mass97.56 g/molColorBlue, blue-greenCrystal habitFlat tabular crystals occurring in radial to botryoidal aggregatesCleavageNoneTenacityBrittleMohs scale hardnessSoftLusterVitreousDiaphaneityTransparentSpecific gravity3.93Optical propertiesBiaxialRefractive indexnα = 1.720, nβ= n.d., nγ = > 1.800PleochroismStrong; X = colorless; Z = dark blueOther characteristicsDecomposes in hot water (synthetic)References[2][3][4]

Spertiniite is a rare copper hydroxide mineral. Chemically, it is copper(II) hydroxide with the formula Cu(OH)2. It occurs as blue to blue-green tabular orthorhombic crystal aggregates in a secondary alkaline environment altering chalcocite. Associated minerals include chalcocite, atacamite, native copper, diopside, grossular, and vesuvianite.[3]

Discovery and occurrence

It was first described in 1981 for an occurrence in the Jeffrey quarry of the Johns-Manville mine, Asbestos, Estrie, Québec. It was named for mine geologist Francesco Spertini (born 1937).[2][3] In addition to the type locality, it has also been reported from Mont Saint-Hilaire, Quebec; Ely, White Pine County, Nevada; and Bisbee, Cochise County, Arizona. It has been reported from Dzhezkazgan, Kazakhstan; from slag at Juliushutte, Astfeld, Harz Mountains, Germany; and from Tsumeb, Namibia.[3]

A 2006 study has produced evidence the blue mineral chrysocolla may be a microscopic mixture of spertiniite, amorphous silica and water.[5][6]

Crystal structure of spertiniite

References

  1. ^ Warr, L. N. (2021). "IMA–CNMNC approved mineral symbols". Mineralogical Magazine. 85 (3): 291–320. Bibcode:2021MinM...85..291W. doi:10.1180/mgm.2021.43. S2CID 235729616.
  2. ^ a b Spertiniite on Mindat
  3. ^ a b c d Spertiniite in The Handbook of Mineralogy
  4. ^ Spertiniite on Webmineral
  5. ^ François Farges, Karim Benzerara, Gordon E. Brown, Jr.; Chrysocolla Redefined as Spertiniite; SLAC-PUB-12232; 13th International Conference On X-Ray Absorption Fine Structure (XAFS13); July 9-14, 2006; Stanford, California
  6. ^ Chrysocolla on Mindat