Mirabilite
Revision as of 12:57, 16 February 2012 by CGerdwilker (talk | contribs)
<bibimport/>
English version by Christa Gerdwilker
Mirabilite[1][2] | |
Mineralogical name | Mirabilite |
Chemical name | Sodium sulfate decahydrate |
Trivial name | Glauber salt, Reussin, Sulphate of Soda |
Chemical formula | Na2SO4•10H2O |
Other forms | Sodium sulphate heptahydrate Na2SO4•7H2O |
Crystal system | monoclinic |
Crystal structure | |
Deliquescence humidity 20°C | 93.6% (20°C), 90% (23°C), 87% (25°C) |
Solubility (g/l) at 20°C | 900 g/l |
Density (g/cm³) | 1.464 g/cm³ |
Molar volume | 219.8 cm3/mol |
Molar weight | 322.21 g/mol |
Transparency | transparent to opaque |
Cleavage | perfect |
Crystal habit | |
Twinning | |
Phase transition | |
Chemical behavior | |
Comments | soluble in water and glycerin, not soluble in pure alcohol easily loses some water, converts to thenardite at 32°C abnormal blue or brown interference colors |
Crystal Optics | |
Refractive Indices | nx = 1.395 ny = 1.396-1.410 nz = 1.398-1.419 |
Birefringence | Δ = 0.04-0.023 |
Optical Orientation | negative |
Pleochroism | |
Dispersion | |
Used Literature | |
{{{Literature}}} |
back to Sulfate
Solubility properties[edit]
Under the polarizing microscope[edit]
Weblinks
[edit]
- ↑ http://webmineral.com/data/Mirabilite.shtml accessed 29/07/2010
- ↑ http://www.mindat.org/min-2725.html accessed 29/07/2010
Literatur[edit]
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