Dictionary Definition
cristobalite n : a white mineral consisting of
silica; found in volcanic rocks
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
Named for the type locality at Cerro San Cristóbal, Mexico.Noun
cristobalite- A mineral of volcanic rocks that solidified at a high temperature. Cristobalite is chemically identical to quartz, with the chemical formula SiO2, but has a different crystal structure. Crystals are always microscopic, and usually form small rounded masses.
See also
Extensive Definition
The mineral cristobalite is a high-temperature
polymorph of quartz
and tridymite. It
occurs as white octahedra in acidic volcanic rocks and in converted
diatomaceous deposits in the Monterey Formation of California and
similar areas. Cristobalite is stable only above 1470 degrees
Celsius, but can crystallize and persist metastably at lower
temperatures.
The persistence of cristobalite outside of its
thermodynamic stability range occurs because the transition from
cristobalite to quartz or
tridymite is
"reconstructive", requiring the breaking up and reforming of the
silica framework. These
frameworks are composed of SiO4 tetrahedra in which every
oxygen atom is shared with a neighbouring tetrahedron, so that the
chemical
formula of silica is SiO2. The breaking of these bonds
required to convert cristobalite to tridymite and quartz requires
considerable activation
energy and may not happen on a human time frame. Framework
silicates are also known as tectosilicates.
There is more than one form of the cristobalite
framework. At high temperatures the structure is cubic.
A tetragonal
form of cristobalite occurs on cooling below ca. 250 ªC at ambient
pressure, and is related to the cubic form by a static tilting of
the silica tetrahedra in the framework. This transition is
variously called the low-high or \alpha-\beta transition. It may be
termed "displacive"; i.e., it is not generally possible to prevent
the cubic \beta-form from becoming tetragonal by rapid cooling.
Under rare circumstances the cubic form may be preserved if the
crystal grain is pinned in a matrix that does not allow for the
considerable spontaneous strain that is involved in the transition,
which causes a change in shape of the crystal. This transition is
highly discontinuous. The exact transition temperature depends on
the crystallinity of the cristobalite sample, which itself depends
on factors such as how long it has been annealed at a particular
temperature.
The cubic β-phase consists of dynamically
disordered silica tetrahedra. The tetrahedra remain fairly regular
and are displaced from their ideal static orientations due to the
action of a class of low-frequency phonons called rigid unit
modes. It is the "freezing" of one of these rigid unit modes
that is the soft mode for the α–β transition.
In the α–β phase transition only one of the three
degenerate cubic crystallographic axes retains a four-fold
rotational axis in the tetragonal form. The choice of axis is
arbitrary, so that various twins can form within the same
grain. These different twin orientations coupled with the
discontinuous nature of the transition can cause considerable
mechanical damage to materials in which cristobalite is present and
that pass repeatedly through the transition temperature, such as
refractory bricks.
When devitrifying silica, cristobalite is usually
the first phase to form, even when well outside of its
thermodynamic stability range. The dynamically disordered nature of
the β-phase is partly responsible for the low enthalpy of fusion of
silica.
The micrometre-scale spheres that make up
precious opal are made of
cristobalite, crystallized metastably
at low temperature.
References
- American Geological Institute Dictionary of Geological Terms.
- Durham, D.L., "Monterey Formation:Diagenesis. In: Uranium in the Monterey Formation of California". US Geological Survey Bulletin 1581-A, 1987.
- Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry, vol. 29., Silica: behavior, geochemistry and physical applications. Mineralogical Society of America, 1994.
- R.B. Sosman, The Phases of Silica. (Rutgers University Press, 1965)
External links
cristobalite in German: Cristobalit
cristobalite in Estonian: Kristobaliit
cristobalite in French: Cristobalite
cristobalite in Italian: Cristobalite
cristobalite in Dutch: Cristobaliet
cristobalite in Japanese: クリストバライト
cristobalite in Polish: Krystobalit
cristobalite in Portuguese: Cristobalita
cristobalite in Romanian: Cristobalit
cristobalite in Ukrainian:
Кристобаліт