sulfate crust

{{Short description|Zone in parts of burning coal dumps}}

Sulfate crust is a zone observed in the axial (central) parts of burning coal dumps and related sites. It is a zone built mainly by anhydrous sulfate minerals, such as godovikovite and millosevichite. The outer zone can easily be hydrated giving rise to minerals like tschermigite and alunogen. The zone forms due to interaction with hot (even around 600 °C) coal-derived gases (mainly Ammonia and Sulfur trioxide) with the "sterile" material (i.e. shales and other rocks serving as the source of {{chem2|Al(3+)}}, {{chem2|Fe(3+)}}, {{chem2|Ca(2+)}} and other cations) in case of the lack of vents for the gases to escape into the atmosphere.Srebrodolskiy B. I. 1989: Tainy Sezonnykh Mineralov. Nauka, Moscow Jambor J. L. and Grew E. S. 1991: New mineral names. American Mineralogist, 76, pp. 299-305Sokol E. V., Maksimova N. V., Nigmatulina E. N., Sharygin V. V. and Kalugin V. M. 2005: Combustion metamorphism. Publishing House of the SB RAS, Novosibirsk

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References

Category:Coal mining

Category:Combustion

Category:Sulfate minerals

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