Sweetite Explained

Sweetite
Category:Hydroxide mineral
Formula:Zn(OH)2
Imasymbol:Sw[1]
Molweight:99.40 g/mol
Strunz:4.FA.10
System:Tetragonal
Unknown space group
Class:Trapezohedral (422)
H-M symbol: (422)
Symmetry:P41212 (no. 92) or P43212 (no. 96)
Unit Cell:a = 8.22, c = 14.34 [Å]
V = 968.93 Å3; Z = 20
Color:Colorless, white
Habit:Bipyramidal
Cleavage:None
Fracture:Irregular
Mohs:3
Luster:Vitreous
Refractive:nω = 1.635 nε = 1.628
Opticalprop:Uniaxial (−)
Birefringence:0.007
Streak:White
Gravity:3.33
Diaphaneity:Transparent to translucent
References:[2] [3] [4] [5]

Sweetite has a general formula of Zn(OH)2.[2] The name is given after a curator of mineral department of the British Museum, Jessie May Sweet (1901–1979).[6] It occurs in an oxidized vein in limestone bedrock with galena, ashoverite, wülfingite, anglesite, cerussite, hydrocerussite, litharge, fluorite, palygorskite and calcite.[5]

Sweetite is tetragonal, which means crystallographically it contains one axis of unequal length and two axes of equal length. The angles between three of the axes are all 90°. It belongs to the space group 4/m. Some crystals show evidence of a basal plane and a few are tabular.[7] In terms of its optical properties, sweetite has two indices of refraction, 1.635 along the ordinary ray and 1.628 along the extraordinary ray.[8] The index of refraction is the velocity of light in vacuum divided by the velocity of light in medium. It also has the birefringence of 0.007.[9] The birefringence means the decomposition of light into two rays when passing through a mineral. Sweetite is 1.64–1.65 in relief, which is medium to high in intensity and means a measure of the relative difference between the index of refraction of a mineral and its surrounding medium.[2]

Sweetite is mostly found from a limestone quarry 200–300 m northwest of Milltown, near Ashover, Derbyshire, England.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Warr. L.N.. 2021. IMA–CNMNC approved mineral symbols. Mineralogical Magazine. 85. 3. 291–320. 10.1180/mgm.2021.43. 2021MinM...85..291W. 235729616. free.
  2. http://webmineral.com/data/Sweetite.shtml Webmineral data
  3. http://www.mindat.org/min-3846.html Mindat.org
  4. http://www.mineralienatlas.de/lexikon/index.php/MineralData?mineral=Sweetit Mineral Atlas
  5. http://rruff.geo.arizona.edu/doclib/hom/sweetite.pdf Handbook of Mineralogy
  6. Ralph, Jolyon. "Sweetite" Mindat.org. 2010. 17 Sep 2010
  7. Clark, A.M., Fejer, E.E., Couper, A.G., and Jones G.C. (1984) Sweetite, a new mineral from Derbyshire. Mineralogical Magazine, 48, 267–269.
  8. Ralph, Jolyon. "Sweetite" Mindat.org. 2010. 7 Nov 2010
  9. "Sweetite" (http://webmineral.com/data/Sweetite.shtml). Mineral Data. http://webmineral.com/data/Sweetite.shtml. Retrieved 7 November 2010.