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RayStraw
Joined: 21 Jul 2018
Posts: 46
Location: Bloomington Illinois


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Posted: May 03, 2023 09:28 Post subject: Azurite to Malachite Chemistry |
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The attached picture shows botryoidal malachite nucleated on the side of a 7cm azurite crystal from the Tsumeb mine, Otavi Highlands, Namibia (Ray Straw specimen, Jeff Scovil photograph).
In a recent paper Smallwood and Cairncross suggested that the overall reaction is as follows:
Two azurite portions plus water yield three malachite portions plus carbon dioxide (for the same amount of copper).
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2*Cu3(CO3)2(OH)2(c)+ H2O(l)
= 3*Cu2(CO3)(OH)2(c)+ CO2(g)
(c stands for crystal, l for liquid, and g for gas)
I believe there may be some intermediate reactions that would allow local movement of copper or copper ions. A crystal to crystal reaction would probably be very slow
Any ideas?
Mineral: | azurite |
Locality: | Tsumeb Mine, first oxidation zone, Tsumeb, Otjikoto Region, Namibia |  |
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Dimensions: | 7 cm crystal |
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James Catmur
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Joined: 14 Sep 2006
Posts: 1199
Location: Cambridge



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Posted: May 03, 2023 11:12 Post subject: Re: Azurite to Malachite Chemistry |
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Ray
I quick search on azurite+malachite shows your interest in this area. Let's see if this question helps. Not my area, so I cannot help
James
RayStraw wrote: | The attached picture shows botryoidal malachite nucleated of the side of a 7cm azurite crystal from the Tsumeb mine, Otavi Highlands, Namibia (Ray Straw specimen, Jeff Scovil photograph).
In a recent paper Smallwood and Cairncross suggested that the overall reaction is as follows:
Two azurite portions plus water yield three malachite portions plus carbon dioxide (for the same amount of copper).
.
2*Cu3(CO3)2(OH)2(c)+ H2O(l)
= 3*Cu2(CO3)(OH)2(c)+ CO2(g)
(c stands for crystal, l for liquid, and g for gas)
I believe there may be some intermediate reactions that would allow local movement of copper or copper ions. A crystal to crystal reaction would probably be very slow
Any ideas? |
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lluis
Joined: 17 Nov 2006
Posts: 694


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Posted: May 03, 2023 11:17 Post subject: Re: Azurite to Malachite Chemistry |
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Hi, Ray
It is the reaction, known from before I was still young.
Or better said, more or less... Water, that you place as liquid, works also as humidity in air... So, no necessary liquid.
Azurite is only stable at, if I remember well, 5 atmospheres CO2 pressure. Taking in account that we are at 1 atmosphere pressure, total, not only CO2, well, it is unstable in atmospheric conditions...
So, the reaction you place occurs, at the rate it is possible.
For crystal to crystal, just take in mind that any place that is more sensitive in structure would begin the change.... that will go till it could depending on humidity available...
Maybe not too clear, but just it is as it go... More stable phases coming for less stable phases... Thermodynamics... :-)
With best wishes
Lluís
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Roger Warin

Joined: 23 Jan 2013
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Posted: May 04, 2023 07:10 Post subject: Re: Azurite to Malachite Chemistry |
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Totally agree, Lluis,
The attack is done at the level of the unit cell and the surrounding gas.
I think that the writing of equations remains purely formal.
The degradation reactions take place step by step, from molecule to molecule under the influence of acid H2O (gas) molecules (with CO2), in the solid state like rust devours iron. The active agent could be a very small wet reactive aggregate (superficially absorbed liquid) which would make sense of the chemical equation.
Copper is a transition element that readily forms organometallic complexes. In a 1st stage, H2CO3 can behave like a copper ligand.
As with viruses, humidity and temperature must be important in the kinetics of the process.
I think so. It's just a suggestion.
Roger.
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James Catmur
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Joined: 14 Sep 2006
Posts: 1199
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Posted: May 04, 2023 07:58 Post subject: Re: Azurite to Malachite Chemistry |
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So it is similar to the way rust spreads across steel? Interesting
Roger Warin wrote: | Totally agree, Lluis,
The attack is done at the level of the unit cell and the surrounding gas.
I think that the writing of equations remains purely formal.
The degradation reactions take place step by step, from molecule to molecule under the influence of acid H2O (gas) molecules (with CO2), in the solid state like rust devours iron. The active agent could be a very small wet reactive aggregate (superficially absorbed liquid) which would make sense of the chemical equation.
Copper is a transition element that readily forms organometallic complexes. In a 1st stage, H2CO3 can behave like a copper ligand.
As with viruses, humidity and temperature must be important in the kinetics of the process.
I think so. It's just a suggestion.
Roger. |
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lluis
Joined: 17 Nov 2006
Posts: 694


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Posted: May 04, 2023 08:56 Post subject: Re: Azurite to Malachite Chemistry |
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Hi, James, Roger, List
Well, iron is sensitive to humidity (it is under hydrogen, so, in water, it reduces cation hydrogen and goes to Fe2+, that is later oxidized to Fe3+)
Not the same mechanism as in azurite to malachite (azurite is just metastable in atmospheric conditions; Iron is less noble than hydrogen. Similar, but not the same (to my mind... and I think it is what is said in chemistry. At least to me. But taking in account that there are as many schools as you wish.... :-( )
Steel is a generic. There so many steels as you wish. Inoxidable steel is also iron, so in principle sensitive to water, but there is a mechanism due to composition that makes corrosion take much more slowly (unless you place there a complexant like chlorides, that accelerate decomposition.... Except for maritime iron, that is high in Titanium, and titanium, if memory serves me well, is the only metal that resists corrosion by chlorides.
Sorry for long wording
With best wishes
Lluís
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Roger Warin

Joined: 23 Jan 2013
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Posted: May 05, 2023 09:12 Post subject: Re: Azurite to Malachite Chemistry |
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Thanks Luis,
I looked at the unit cell structures of azurite and malachite (AMS Data Base).
If the unit cell of azurite seems more symmetrical to me (both minerals are monoclinic), the unit cell of malachite surprised me, in particular at the level of the CO3 groups. Azurite crystals are also better formed with a rich morphology.
In malachite, each Cu atom is surrounded by 2 nearest oxygens and 2 (OH).
Cu is square planar. Thus plane Cu alignments are formed and the Cu octahedra are very deformed.
I would like to understand this pseudomorphosis which always begins on the surface of the crystal.
The comparison with rust stops there because it is not a mineral.
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lluis
Joined: 17 Nov 2006
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Posted: May 05, 2023 10:26 Post subject: Re: Azurite to Malachite Chemistry |
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Hi, Roger
Transformation of azurite into malachite always should take place in surface..just because water is needed, and water reaching insides without touching surfaces, well, impossible...
In the remote case that water could be inside the azurite, then CO2 should be released, and pressure would be over the 5 atmospheres and azurite would be stable....
Yo my mind, maybe too simple, is easy: simply possibilities (and think that azurite is formed in water... Just at pressures of CO2 over the 5 atmospheres.....
I hope it may serve...
For structure., it is like diamond and graphite. One is cubic, the other hexagonal/trigonal.
symmetries are different... Nevertheless, graphite is metastable in ambient conditions and when done what is needed, it becomes graphite (I think to remember that heating till a temperature...)
Or the tin, forms Beta and Alfa. Form beta is malleable, and is how is usually known. Its crystalline structure are tetrahedrons. But under 13,2ºC, it becomes tin alfa, with structure based in cubes... and is pulverulent....
In Austria it is said that there is a big trouble with some monuments done in tin (as far as I remember the burial of Empress Maria Theresia...)
With best wishes
Lluís
P.D.: I would like to know as many crystallography as you know! Chemistry is so easy in comparison....
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RayStraw
Joined: 21 Jul 2018
Posts: 46
Location: Bloomington Illinois


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Posted: May 05, 2023 16:04 Post subject: Re: Azurite to Malachite Chemistry |
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Thanks for all the insight.
I trying to understand how the pseudomorph grows with the azurite crystal.
Perhaps the first step is dissolution of the azurite near the pseudorph with acid. Then the malachite forms next. This would presume that the chemistry at the azujrite-psudomorph is different than the chemistry on the outside surface of the azurite.
Does this make any sense?
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Bob Morgan
Joined: 18 Jan 2018
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Location: Savannah, Georgia



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Posted: May 05, 2023 21:35 Post subject: Re: Azurite to Malachite Chemistry |
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This discussion is largely beyond my knowledge particularly of chemistry. The acicular growth of malachite within a euhedral azurite crystal seems to me to require dissolution of the azurite. Perhaps that's already recognized in the previous discussion about the role of water. But somewhere there has to be a transfer of material to a dispersion fed growth of malachite.
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