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Lavendulan

Lavendulan
Lavendulan-Cornwallite-253920.jpg
Intense blue lavendulan with green cornwallite on matrix. The circlet of lavendulan is about 0.5 cm across. Locality: Dolores prospect, Pastrana, Region of Murcia, Spain.
General
Category Arsenate Minerals
Formula
(repeating unit)
NaCaCu5(AsO4)4Cl.5H2O Usually with some K, Co and Ni
Strunz classification 8.DG.05
Dana classification 42.9.4.2
Crystal system Monoclinic
Crystal class Prismatic (2/m)
(same H-M symbol)
Space group P21/n
Identification
Formula mass 1,062.00 g/mol
Color Blue or greenish blue
Crystal habit Thin botryoidal crusts of minute radiating fibers or thin rectangular, pseudo-orthorhombic plates
Twinning Common
Cleavage Good on {010}, distinct on {100} and {001}
Fracture Uneven
Tenacity Brittle
Mohs scale hardness 2½ 2½ to 3
Luster Vitreous to waxy, satiny in aggregates
Streak Light blue
Diaphaneity Translucent
Specific gravity 3.54 3.84
Optical properties Biaxial (-), nearly uniaxial (–)
Refractive index

Nx = 1.645 Ny = 1.715 Nz = 1.725
Nx = 1.660 Ny = 1.715 Nz = 1.734
Nx = 1.66 Ny = 1.715 Nz = 1.734

omega = 1.748 epsilon = 1.645
Pleochroism O = pale blue to pale greenish blue, E = blue to greenish blue
Solubility Easily soluble in hydrochloric acid
Other characteristics Not radioactive
References

Nx = 1.645 Ny = 1.715 Nz = 1.725
Nx = 1.660 Ny = 1.715 Nz = 1.734
Nx = 1.66 Ny = 1.715 Nz = 1.734

Lavendulan is an uncommon copper arsenate mineral, known for its characteristic intense electric blue colour. It belongs to the lavendulan group, which has four members:

Lemanskiite and lavendulan are dimorphs; they have the same formula, but different structures. Lemanskiite is tetragonal, but lavendulan is monoclinic. Lavendulan has the same structure as sampleite, and the two minerals form a series. It is the calcium analogue of zdenĕkite, and the arsenate analogue of sampleite.

Lavendulan was originally named for the lavender color of the "type" specimen, which has since been determined to be a mixture with no relationship to modern lavendulan. The mineral which is now called lavendulan is not a lavender blue color, and has no relationship to the “type” material from Annaberg. It often contains potassium, cobalt and nickel as impurities.

Although lavendulan is monoclinic, the angle β is very close to 90°, making the mineral pseudo-orthorhombic. Most references describe the lavendulan unit cell as an orthorhombic cell containing 8 formula units (Z=8) but Mindat.org describes a monoclinic unit cell with the length of the c axis halved, and only 4 formula units per unit cell (Z=4) and space group P21/n. Unit cell parameters are reported as

Lavendulan is a blue or greenish blue translucent mineral, with a vitreous to waxy luster, satiny in aggregates, and a light blue streak. It occurs as thin botryoidal crusts of minute radiating fibers or as thin rectangular, pseudo-orthorhombic plates, with cleavage in three directions, nearly perfect perpendicular to the b crystal axis, and distinct perpendicular to the a and c axes. Twinning is common. The mineral is brittle, with an uneven fracture. It is quite soft, with hardness 2.5, between gypsum and calcite, and relatively dense; its specific gravity is 3.84, close to that of topaz, and much denser than quartz (specific gravity 2.5 to 2.7). It is easily soluble in hydrochloric acid.


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Wikipedia

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