Duftite | |
Category: | Arsenate minerals |
Formula: | PbCuAsO4(OH) |
Imasymbol: | Dft[1] |
Molweight: | 426.67 g/mol |
Strunz: | 8.BH.35 |
Dana: | 41.5.1.4 |
System: | Orthorhombic |
Class: | Disphenoidal (222) H-M symbol: (2 2 2) |
Symmetry: | P212121 |
Unit Cell: | a = 7.768(1), b = 9.211(1) c = 5.999(1) [Å]; Z = 4 |
Color: | Green, olive green or grey green. Generally zoned due to compositional variations. |
Habit: | Tiny crystals elongated along [001] with curved and rough faces, aggregated into crusts. Crystals may be pseudo-octahedral. |
Cleavage: | Indistinct |
Fracture: | Uneven to conchoidal |
Mohs: | 4.5 |
Luster: | Vitreous on fracture surfaces and dull on crystal faces |
Refractive: | nα = 2.03–2.04, nβ = 2.06–2.08, nγ = 2.08–2.10 |
Opticalprop: | Biaxial (-), faint apple-green color (transmitted light) |
Birefringence: | δ = 0.06 |
2V: | Large |
Dispersion: | r > v, perceptible |
Streak: | Pale green or white |
Gravity: | 6.4 (measured), 6.60 (calculated) |
Solubility: | Readily soluble in acids |
Diaphaneity: | Crystals are transparent to translucent |
Other: | Decrepitates on heating. Not radioactive. |
References: | [2] [3] [4] |
Duftite is a relatively common arsenate mineral with the formula CuPb(AsO4)(OH), related to conichalcite. It is green and often forms botryoidal aggregates. It is a member of the adelite-descloizite Group, Conichalcite-Duftite Series. Duftite and conichalcite specimens from Tsumeb are commonly zoned in color and composition. Microprobe analyses and X-ray powder-diffraction studies indicate extensive substitution of Zn for Cu, and Ca for Pb in the duftite structure. This indicates a solid solution among conichalcite, CaCu(AsO4)(OH), austinite, CaZn(AsO4)(OH) and duftite PbCu(AsO4)(OH), all of them belonging to the adelite group of arsenates.[5] It was named after Mining Councilor G Duft, Director of the Otavi Mine and Railroad Company, Tsumeb, Namibia.[6] The type locality is the Tsumeb Mine, Tsumeb, Otjikoto Region, Namibia.
The structure[7] is composed of chains of edge-sharing CuO6 distorted octahedra parallel to the c axis. The chains are linked by AsO4 tetrahedra and Pb atoms.
Duftite is an uncommon product of weathered sulfide ore deposits. It is associated with azurite at the type locality,[6] and with bayldonite, segnitite, agardite and gartrellite at the Central Cobar Mines, New South Wales, Australia, where some pseudomorphs of duftite after mimetite have also found.[8] It occurs in association with olivenite, mottramite, azurite, malachite, wulfenite and calcite in the Tsumeb, Namibia deposit. It occurs with bayldonite, beudantite, mimetite and cerussite in the Cap Garonne mine, France.[4]
Reported from Argentina, Australia, Austria, Chile, the Czech Republic, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Namibia, Poland, Portugal, Russia, South Africa, Spain, Switzerland, the UK, the US and Zimbabwe.[3]