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Calcite

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Calcite mineral is the most stable polymorph of calcium carbonate. The natural calcite is available as colourless, grey, yellow and even green calcite. We are the most prominent among the calcite manufacturers in India. Calcite mineral is soluble in dilute acid. The range of its diaphaneity is from transparent to translucent. Calcite can be dissolved by groundwater or precipitated by groundwater, depending on climatic factors including the water temperature, pH, and dissolved ion concentrations.

General

CategoryCarbonate mineral
Chemical formulaCaCO3


Identification

The Unit Cell of Calcite
Calcite is a carbonate mineral and the most stable polymorph of calcium carbonate (CaCO3). The other polymorphs are the minerals aragonite and vaterite. Aragonite will change to calcite at 470°C, and vaterite is even less stable.

Fossil Seashell with Calcite Crystals
Calcite crystals are trigonal-rhombohedral, though actual calcite rhombohedra are rare as natural crystals. However, they show a remarkable variety of habits including acute to obtuse rhombohedra, tabular forms, prisms, or various scalenohedra. Calcite exhibits several twinning types adding to the variety of observed forms. It may occur as fibrous, granular, lamellar, or compact. Cleavage is usually in three directions parallel to the rhombohedron form. Its fracture is conchoidal, but difficult to obtain.

It has a Mohs hardness of 3, a specific gravity of 2.71, and its luster is vitreous in crystallized varieties. Color is white or none, though shades of gray, red, yellow, green, blue, violet, brown, or even black can occur when the mineral is charged with impurities.

Calcite is transparent to opaque and may occasionally show phosphorescence or fluorescence. It is perhaps best known because of its power to produce strong double refraction of light, such that objects viewed through a clear piece of calcite appear doubled in all of their parts—a phenomenon first described by Rasmus Bartholin. A beautifully transparent variety used for optical purposes comes from Iceland, called Iceland spar. Acute scalenohedral crystals are sometimes referred to as "dogtooth spar".

Single calcite crystals display an optical property called birefringence. The birefringent effect (using calcite) was first described by the Danish scientist Rasmus Bartholin in 1669. At a wavelength of ~590 nm calcite has ordinary and extraordinary refractive indices of 1.658 and 1.486, respectively. Between 190 and 1700 nm, the ordinary refractive index varies roughly between 1.6 and 1.4, while the extraordinary refractive index varies between 1.9 and 1.5.

Calcite, like most carbonates, will dissolve with most forms of acid. Calcite can be either dissolved by groundwater or precipitared by groundwater, depending on several factors including the water temperature, pH, and dissolved ion concentrations. Although calcite is fairly insoluble in cold water, acidity can cause dissolution of calcite and release of carbon dioxide gas. Calcite exhibits an unusual characteristic called retrograde solubility in which it becomes less soluble in water as the temperature increases. When conditions are right for precipitation, calcite forms mineral coatings that cement the existing rock grains together or it can fill fractures. When conditions are right for dissolution, the removal of calcite can dramatically increase the porosity a permeability of the rock, and if it continues for a long period of time may result in the formation of caverns.

Natural Occurrence

Calcite is often the primary constituent of the shells of marine organisms, e.g., plankton (such as coccoliths and planktic foraminifera , the hard parts of red algae, some sponges brachiopoda, echinoderms, most bryozoa, and parts of the shells of some bivalves, such as oysters and rudists)

Calcite is a common constituent of sedimentary rocks, limestone in particular, much of which is formed from the shells of dead marine organisms. Approximately 10% of sedimentary rock is limestone.

Calcite is the primary mineral in metamorphic marble. It also occurs as a vein mineral in deposits from hot springs, and it occurs in caverns as stalactites and stalagmites.

Calcite may also be found in volcanic or mantle-derived rocks such as carbonatites, kimberlites, or rarely in peridotites.


ColorColorless or white, also gray, yellow, green.
Crystal habitCrystalline, granular, stalactitic, concretionary, massive.
Crystal systemTrigonal Hexagonal Scalenohedral
TwinningCommon by four twin laws
CleavagePerfect on [1011], [1011] and [1011]
FractureBrittle - conchoidal
Mohs Scale hardness3
LusterVitreous
Refractive indexnÏ? = 1.640 - 1.660 nε = 1.486
Optical PropertiesUniaxial (-)
Birefringenceδ = 0.154 - 0.174
StreakWhite
Specific gravity2.71
SolubilitySoluble in dilute acids
DiaphaneityTransparent to translucent
Other CharacteristicsMay fluoresce red, blue, yellow, and other colors under either SW and LW UV; phosphorescent


Calcite 01
Calcite (Calcite 01)

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Calcite 02
Calcite (Calcite 02)

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