Crystal structure

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The pyroxene group includes minerals that form in both the orthorhombic and monoclinic crystal systems. Orthorhombic pyroxenes are referred to as orthopyroxenes, and monoclinic pyroxenes are called clinopyroxenes. The essential feature of all pyroxene structures is the linkage of the silicon-oxygen (SiO4) tetrahedrons by sharing two of the four corners to form continuous chains. The chains, which extend indefinitely parallel to the ccrystallographic axis, have the composition of (SiO3)n(Figure 1). A repeat distance of approximately 5.3 Å along the length of the chain defines the caxis of the unit cell. The SiO3chains are bonded to a layer of octahedrally coordinated cation bands which also extend parallel to the caxis. The octahedral layer contains two distinct cation sites called M1 and M2. The size and charge of the cations that occupy the M2 site chiefly determine the structural type of a pyroxene. Large, singly or doubly charged cations give rise to a diopside (monoclinic) structure, whereas small, singly or doubly charged cations result in an enstatite (orthorhombic) structure.

In most pyroxenes the chains are not exactly straight as shown in Figure 1, but are rotated or kinked so that more than one type of chain is possible. The diopside, jadeite, augite, protoenstatite, and spodumene structures consist of only one chain type. Pigeonite, clinoenstatite, and omphacite have two symmetrically distinct types of tetrahedral chains. Orthopyroxenes also have two distinct types of tetrahedral chains and an octahedral stacking sequence that leads to a doubling of the a axis.

A representative pyroxene structure that illustrates the tetrahedral and octahedral chains in jadeite is shown in Figure 2. The octahedral strips consist of M1 and M2 octahedrons sandwiched between two oppositely pointing tetrahedral chains. The M1 sites are occupied by smaller cations such as magnesium, iron, aluminum, and manganese, which are coordinated to six oxygen atoms to form a regular octahedron. In monoclinic pyroxenes, the M2 site is a large irregular polyhedron occupied by the larger calcium and sodium cations which are in eightfold coordination. In the low-calcium orthorhombic pyroxenes, M2 contains magnesium and iron, and the polyhedron takes on a more regular octahedral shape. The M1 cation strip is bonded to oxygen atoms of two oppositely pointing tetrahedral chains. Together, these form a tetrahedral-octahedral-tetrahedral (t-o-t) strip. A schematic projection of the pyroxene structure perpendicular to the caxis and the relationship of the pyroxene cleavage to the t-o-t strips or I beams is shown in Figure 3.

Pyroxenes in the quadrilateral with compositions near the diopside-hedenbergite join exist only in the monoclinic form. Those with compositions near the enstatite-orthoferrosilite join containing less than about 5 percent CaSiO3 can be subdivided into two structural types, clinopyroxene or orthopyroxene. Those with approximately 5–20 percent CaSiO3 are monoclinic at high temperatures (pigeonite) and invert to an orthorhombic structure at low temperatures (enstatite). Those with less than 50 percent FeSiO3 can exist as clinoenstatite (monoclinic) or enstatite (orthorhombic) polymorphic structures. Those with more than 50 percent FeSiO3 are clinoferrosilite (monoclinic) or ferrosilite (orthorhombic) polymorphic structures. Pyroxenes outside the quadrilateral all have monoclinic pyroxene structures similar to that of diopside.

The inversion of high-temperature structures to low-temperature structures is often accompanied by the exsolution of lamellae of either a separate calcium-rich or magnesium-iron-rich phase. For example, as high-temperature monoclinic pigeonite slowly cools, it exsolves calcium ions to form augite lamellae and inverts to the orthorhombic enstatite structure. Consequently, the presence of the exsolution lamellae is evidence of a previous monoclinic structure.

Physical properties

Within hand specimens, pyroxene can generally be identified by the following characteristics: two directions of cleavage intersecting at roughly right angles (approximately 87° and 93°), stubby prismatic crystal habit with nearly square cross sections perpendicular to cleavage directions, and a Mohs hardness between 5 and 7. Specific gravity values of the pyroxenes range from about 3.0 to 4.0. Unlike amphiboles, pyroxenes do not yield water when heated in a closed tube. Characteristically, pyroxenes are dark green to black in colour, but they can range from dark green to apple-green and from lilac to colourless, depending on the chemical composition. Diopside ranges from white to light green, darkening in colour as the iron content increases. Hedenbergite and augite are typically black. Pigeonite is greenish brown to black. Jadeite (see photograph) is white to apple-green to emerald-green or mottled white and green. Aegirine (acmite) forms long, slender prismatic crystals that are brown to green in colour. Enstatite is yellowish or greenish brown and sometimes has a submetallic bronzelike lustre. Iron-rich ferrosilite orthopyroxenes range from brown to black. Spodumene is colourless, white, gray, pink, yellow, or green. The two gem varieties are a clear lilac-coloured type called kunzite, while the clear emerald-green type is known as hiddenite.

In thin sections, monoclinic pyroxenes are distinguished by two directions of cleavage at approximately 87° and 93°, eight-sided basal cross sections, and light brown or green colour. Orthorhombic pyroxenes differ from monoclinic pyroxenes in that they have parallel extinction.

Microscopically, many igneous pyroxenes show exsolution textures of thin lamellae of one pyroxene in a host of a different composition. The lamellae occur as oriented intergrowths that display parallel and herringbone textures. These lamellae result from the exsolution of a separate pyroxene phase from a host grain due to subsolidus re-equilibration (that occurs while the mineral is in the solid state) during slow cooling.