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CHAPTER 4: Minerals. Making Steel This photo shows the process of making steel. What are some other products that we make from minerals?

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Presentation on theme: "CHAPTER 4: Minerals. Making Steel This photo shows the process of making steel. What are some other products that we make from minerals?"— Presentation transcript:

1 CHAPTER 4: Minerals

2 Making Steel This photo shows the process of making steel. What are some other products that we make from minerals?

3 Minerals A mineral is a naturally occurring, inorganic, crystalline solid with a definite, but sometimes variable, chemical composition. Can you name any of these minerals?

4 Minerals continued Minerals are compounds that we use every day The average automobile contains: – more than 1000 kg of steel, – 110 kg of aluminum, – 23 kg of carbon, – 19 kg of copper, – 19 kg of silicon, – 10 kg of zinc, and – more than 30 other metals including titanium, gold and platinum.

5 Common Minerals

6 Each mineral has unique chemistry and unique Crystalline Structure Halite crystals from a salt shaker Steven Earle

7

8 Rocks and Minerals A Rock is a solid aggregate of minerals Four different minerals are visible in this piece of granite. Can you name them?

9 Which metals or non-metals are mined in your province? Mining/extraction/processing Processing only Financing/administration Canadian mining & related activities

10 Identifying Minerals Geologists use Physical Properties to identify minerals Identify by testing: cleavage, fracture, hardness, luster, colour, streak, reaction to acid, crystal habit

11 Returning to the Halite model Fracture just means “breakage” (irregular or conchoidal) Cleavage represents breaks along specific planes that are determined by the mineral’s molecular structure

12 Hardness Tests Created in 1812 by Austrian mineralogist, Friedrich Mohs Mineral Drag and Drop Animation What is the hardness of a mineral that is soft enough to be scratched by a wire nail and hard enough to scratch a copper penny?

13 Luster, Colour and Streak Luster refers to the way a mineral reflects light. – (metallic, vitreous or “glassy”, silky, resinous, pearly, and earthy) Colour is not always a reliable property for identification of a mineral. – (Structure influences light absorption and reflection. Minor impurities can have a significant influence on colour.) Streak is the color of the powdered mineral. – (testable by scraping the rock along a porcelain “streak plate”)

14 Atoms Atoms are the smallest components of nature with the properties of a given substance ParticleMassCharge Electron~0 Proton1+1 Neutron10

15 Atoms continued For any given element: Atomic number is the number of protons in the nucleus Mass number is the total number of neutrons and protons in the nucleus What are the atomic number and the mass number (a.k.a atomic weight) of the element carbon?

16 Isotopes Isotopes are atoms with differing numbers of neutrons (hence differing mass numbers) but a similar number of protons

17 Variations in Electrical Charge Variations in electrical charge form ions Negative charge = anion Positive charge = cation When an atom loses electrons does it become a cation or an anion?

18 Octete Rule Atoms bond to achieve a stable electron configuration. Most atoms bond to achieve 8 electrons in the outer shell - the so-called “Octet Rule”

19 Ionic Bonding Minerals are compounds of atoms bonded together “… to achieve a stable electron configuration …” In a sodium-chlorine ionic bond, which element is the anion and which is the cation?

20 Covalent Bonding “… to achieve a stable electron configuration …”

21 Metallic Bonding Bonding between atoms within metals. All “free” electrons sAhared in an “electron sea”. The metallic bonding in metals accounts for two of their important properties: – - they conduct electricity (because electrons are free to move), and – - they are malleable (because the bonds are flexible). Native copper

22 Rocks and Minerals All types of rocks are primarily made up of minerals Igneous minerals crystallize from cooling magma, either slowly at depth or quickly at surface. Sedimentary minerals crystallize between sedimentary grains from dissolved elements in groundwater, usually in the absence of oxygen. Metamorphic minerals recrystallize from existing minerals where conditions in the crust cause high heat and pressure.

23 Formation of Magma Magma forms in three major tectonic settings submarine volcanism

24 Oxygen and Silicon are the two most abundant elements in the crust

25 Silica Silica - 4 oxygen atoms surround a single silicon atom. Each oxygen atom covalently shares 1 electron with the silicon atom, jointly filling its outermost shell. Shield volcano Composite volcano Hot spot Count the charges. What is the overall charge on a silica tetrahedron?

26 Types of Silicate Structures Where silica tetrahedra are joined together O atoms are shared, and the overall negative charge is reduced.

27 Metallic Cations Metallic cations join silicate structures together to form a neutral compound Cations of like size and charge substitute within silicate structures. This forms a wide variety of minerals Most commonly substituted Cation pairs are Na+/Ca2+, Al3+ /Si4+, and Fe2+/Mg2+ Olivine varies by Single Cation Substitution (e.g., Fe for Mg) Plagioclase Feldspar varies by Double Cation Substitution (meaning that when Ca substitutes for Na, Al substitutes for Si)

28 Common Silicate Minerals What exactly is meant by the notation (Fe,Mg) or (Ca,Na)?

29 Seven Common Rock-Forming Minerals Mt. Pinatubo, 1991 Olivine Pyroxene Biotite Quartz Calcite Plagioclase and Orthoclase All but one of these are silicate minerals. Which one is not a silicate? Amphibole The Feldspar group

30 Bingham Canyon Mine (Utah) Olivine crystals (light green) and fragments of basalt (black) from Green Sand Beach, Hawaii Steven Earle

31 7 Major Classes of Minerals

32 Silicates Native Elements Sulfides Halides Carbonates Feldspar – NaAlSi 3 O 8 Pyrite - FeS 2 Fluorite – CaF 2 Hematite – Fe 2 O 3 Native copper - Cu Gypsum - CaSO 4 ·2H 2 O Sulfates Calcite – CaCO 3 Oxides

33 Mining Mining is an important part of our current economic and industrial systems. The potential for environ- mental damage is real, but it can be minimized. By law, mining plans must include stream, ground- water and topsoil protection, careful waste rock handling, prevention of acid rock drainage, erosion, sediment, and dust control and restoration of the shape of the land. Acid Rock Drainage destroys streams near many mines Acidic drainage at the Mt. Washington Mine, on Vancouver Island, BC Steven Earle

34 COPYRIGHT Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd. All rights reserved. Reproduction or translation of this work beyond that permitted by Access Copyright (The Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency) is unlawful. Requests for further information should be addressed to the Permissions Department, John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd. The purchaser may make back-up copies for his or her own use only and not for distribution or resale. The author and the publisher assume no responsibility for errors, omissions, or damages caused by the use of these programs or from the use of the information contained herein.


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