Jump to content

Uranopilite

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by VMS Mosaic (talk | contribs) at 02:45, 21 April 2016 (per MOS). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Uranopilite
Uranopilite with Fluorescence - Exposed in the Mineralogical Museum, Bonn, Germany
General
CategorySulfate minerals
Formula
(repeating unit)
(UO2)6SO4(OH)6O2·14H2O
Strunz classification7.EA.05
Crystal systemTriclinic
Space groupTriclinic - pinacoidal
H-M symbol (1)
Space group P1
Identification
References[1][2]

Uranopilite is a minor ore of uranium with the chemistry (UO2)6SO4(OH)6O2·14H2O or, hydrated uranyl sulfate hydroxide.

As with many uranyl minerals, it is fluorescent and radioactive. It is straw yellow in normal light. Uranopilite fluoresces a bright green under ultraviolet light. Uranopilite contains clusters of six uranyl pentagonal bipyramids that share equatorial edges and vertices, with the clusters cross-linked to form chains by sharing vertices with sulfate tetrahedra. In uranopilite, the chains are linked directly by hydrogen bonds, as well as to interstitial H2O groups.

Uranopilite is associated with other uranyl minerals such as zippeite and johannite and, like them, is usually found as an efflorescent crust in uranium mines.

Notable occurrences include:

See also

References