Talnakhite

Talnakhite

Talnakhite and putoranite
General
Category Sulfide mineral
Formula
(repeating unit)
Cu9(Fe, Ni)8S16
Strunz classification 2.CB.10b
Crystal system Isometric
Crystal class Hextetrahedral (43m)
H-M symbol: (4 3m)
Space group I4 3m
Identification
Color Brass-yellow, tarnishes to pink or brown tints, then iridescent
Luster Metallic
Diaphaneity Opaque

Talnakhite is a mineral of chalcopyrite group with formula: Cu9(Fe, Ni)8S16.[1] It was named after the Talnakh ore deposit, near Norilsk in Western Siberia, Russia where it was discovered as reported in 1963 by I. Budko and E. Kulagov.[2] It was officially named "talnakhite" in 1968.[3][4] Despite the initial announcement it turned out to be not a face centered high-temperature polymorph of chalcopyrite, but to have composition Cu18(Fe, Ni)18S32. At 80 °C (176 °F) to 100 °C (212 °F) it decomposes to tetragonal cubanite plus bornite.[5][6]

References

  1. Talnakhite: Talnakhite mineral information and data
  2. Ivetta Budko, Eduard Kulagov, "A Natural Cubic Chalcopyrite" (Будько И.А., Кулагов Э.А., "Природный кубический халькопирит"), Докл. АН АН СССР. (1963) vol. 152, no. 2, pp. 408410.
  3. Будько И. А., Кулагов Э. А. "Новый минерал талнахит — кубическая разновидность халькопирита", Zapiski Vsesoyuznogo Mineraligicheckogo Obshchestva, 1968. ч. 97, вып. 1, с. 63.
  4. "Time to gather stones"(Russian)
  5. Cabri L.J., Econ.Geol.(1967) 62, 910-925
  6. Michael Fleischner, "New Mineral Names", The American Mineralogist, 1970, vol 55, p. 2135
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/28/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.