Bornite

{{Short description|Sulfide mineral}}

{{Redirect|Peacock ore|another sulfide mineral sometimes called that|Chalcopyrite}}

{{infobox mineral

| name = Bornite

| category = Sulfide mineral

| boxwidth =

| boxbgcolor =

| image = Bornite-Quartz-135210.jpg

| imagesize = 260px

| caption = Lightly iridescent bornite crystal on quartz needles, from Kazakhstan
{{small|Specimen size: {{cvt|3.6|×|2.2|×|1.2|cm|in}}}}

| formula = Cu5FeS4

| IMAsymbol=Bn{{Cite journal|last=Warr|first=L.N.|date=2021|title=IMA–CNMNC approved mineral symbols|url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/mineralogical-magazine/article/imacnmnc-approved-mineral-symbols/62311F45ED37831D78603C6E6B25EE0A|journal=Mineralogical Magazine|volume=85|issue=3|pages=291–320|doi=10.1180/mgm.2021.43|bibcode=2021MinM...85..291W|s2cid=235729616|doi-access=free}}

| molweight = 501.88 g/mol

| strunz = 2.BA.10

| system = Orthorhombic

| class = Dipyramidal (mmm)
H-M symbol: (2/m 2/m 2/m)

| symmetry = Pbca

| unit cell = a = 10.95 Å, b = 21.862 Å,
c = 10.95 Å; Z = 16

| color = Copper red, bronze brown, purple

| habit = Granular, massive, disseminated – Crystals pseudocubic, dodecahedral, octahedral

| twinning = Penetration twins on [111]

| cleavage = Poor on [111]

| fracture = Uneven to subconchoidal

| tenacity = Brittle

| mohs = 3–3.25

| luster = Metallic if fresh, iridescent tarnish

| refractive = Opaque

| opticalprop =

| birefringence =

| pleochroism = Weak but noticeable

| streak = Grayish black

| gravity = 5.06–5.08

| density =

| melt =

| fusibility =

| diagnostic =

| solubility =

| diaphaneity =

| other = Magnetic after heating, iridescent

| references = {{Cite web|last1=Barthelmy|first1=David|year=2014|url=http://www.webmineral.com/data/Bornite.shtml|access-date=12 August 2022|title = Bornite Mineral Data|website=Webmineral.com}}{{cite web |last1=Anthony |first1=John W. |last2=Bideaux |first2=Richard A. |last3=Bladh |first3=Kenneth W. |last4=Nichols |first4=Monte C. |title=Bornite |url=http://www.handbookofmineralogy.org/pdfs/bornite.pdf |website=Handbook of Mineralogy |publisher=Mineral Data Publishing |access-date=12 August 2022 |date=2005}}{{mindat|id=727|title=Bornite|access-date=12 August 2022}}

}}

Bornite, also known as peacock ore, is a sulfide mineral with chemical composition {{chem2|Cu5FeS4}} that crystallizes in the orthorhombic system (pseudo-cubic). It is an important copper ore.

Appearance

Image:Mineraly.sk - bornit.jpg

Bornite has a brown to copper-red color on fresh surfaces that tarnishes to various iridescent shades of blue to purple in places. Its striking iridescence gives it the nickname peacock copper or peacock ore.

Mineralogy

Bornite is an important copper ore mineral and occurs widely in porphyry copper deposits along with the more common chalcopyrite. Chalcopyrite and bornite are both typically replaced by chalcocite and covellite in the supergene enrichment zone of copper deposits. Bornite is also found as disseminations in mafic igneous rocks, in contact metamorphic skarn deposits, in pegmatites and in sedimentary cupriferous shales. It is important as an ore for its copper content of about 63 percent by mass.

=Structure=

File:Bornite by petrographic microscope.jpg

At temperatures above {{convert|228|C}}, the structure is isometric with a unit cell that is about 5.50 Å on an edge. This structure is based on cubic close-packed sulfur atoms, with copper and iron atoms randomly distributed into six of the eight tetrahedral sites located in the octants of the cube. With cooling, the Fe and Cu become ordered, so that 5.5 Å subcells in which all eight tetrahedral sites are filled alternate with subcells in which only four of the tetrahedral sites are filled; symmetry is reduced to orthorhombic.Nesse, William D., "Sulfides and Related Minerals" in Introduction to Mineralogy, New York: Oxford University Press, 2000, p 429

=Composition=

Substantial variation in the relative amounts of copper and iron is possible and solid solution extends towards chalcopyrite (CuFeS2) and digenite (Cu9S5). Exsolution of blebs and lamellae of chalcopyrite, digenite, and chalcocite is common.

=Form and twinning=

Rare crystals are approximately cubic, dodecahedral, or octahedral. Usually massive. Penetration twinning on the crystallographic direction, {111}.

Occurrence

File:Silver-Bornite-171549.jpg, Mexico (size: 7.5 × 4.3 × 3.4 cm)]]

It occurs globally in copper ores with notable crystal localities in Butte, Montana and at Bristol, Connecticut in the U.S. It is also collected from the Carn Brea mine, Illogan, and elsewhere in Cornwall, England. Large crystals are found from the Frossnitz Alps, eastern Tirol, Austria; the Mangula mine, Lomagundi district, Zimbabwe; from the N'ouva mine, Talate, Morocco, the West Coast of Tasmania and in Dzhezkazgan, Kazakhstan. There are also traces of it found amongst the hematite in the Pilbara region of Western Australia.

History and etymology

It was first described in 1725 for an occurrence in the Ore Mountains, Bohemia, in what is now the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It was named in 1845 for Austrian mineralogist Ignaz von Born.

See also

References

{{reflist}}

Bibliography

  • Palache, C., H. Berman, and C. Frondel (1944) Dana’s system of mineralogy, (7th edition), v. I, 195–197.
  • [http://rruff.info/uploads/CM9_85.pdf Manning, P.G. (1966) A study of the bonding Properties of Sulphur in Bornite, The Canadian Mineralogist, 9, 85-94]

{{Commons category|Bornite}}

{{Wiktionary}}

{{ores}}

Category:Copper ores

Category:Iron minerals

Category:Sulfide minerals

Category:Orthorhombic minerals

Category:Minerals in space group 61