sexta-feira, 5 de julho de 2013

Crisoberilo

Crisoberilo

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Crisoberilo
Crisoberilo.jpeg
General
Categoría Minerales óxidos
Clase 04.BA.05 (Strunz)
Fórmula química BeAl2O4
Propiedades físicas
Color Verde oscuro, verde esmeralda, verde parduzco, verde amarillento, amarillo, azul
Raya Blanca
Lustre Vítreo
Transparencia Transparente a translúcido
Sistema cristalino Ortorrómbico
Hábito cristalino Masivo, cristales prismáticos
Exfoliación Buena
Fractura Irregular a concoidea
Dureza 8,5
Tenacidad Quebradizo
Densidad 3,75 g/cm3
Índice de refracción nα=1.745 nβ=1.748 nγ=1.754
Pleocroísmo visible
Propiedades ópticas Biaxial (+)
Radioactividad No radiactiva
Variedades principales
Alexandrita de color verde que cambia a rojo con luz artificial
Cymophanita variedad opalescente
Cimofana u ojo de gato, variedad de crisoberilo.
Crisoberilo, también llamado crisópalo o crisolita, es un mineral compuesto de óxido de berilio y aluminio, silicato de alúmina y aluminato de glucina. Sus variedades cimofana y alexandrita se consideran piedras preciosas.

Índice

Características

Es de color verde amarillento, brillo vítreo, infusible al soplete, insoluble en los ácidos y difícilmente atacable por la fusión con los álcalis, raya el cuarzo y es rayada por la espinela. Su peso específico varía de 3,59 a 3,75.

Ubicación

Se halla cristalizada en prismas rectangulares simples o modificados, en cristales rodados, amorfa y pocas veces cambiante con reflejos vivos. La cimofana pertenece a los terrenos graníticos y viene de Minas Gerais (Brasil), de Estados Unidos, de los montes Urales y de la isla de Ceilán.

Variedades

Alexandrite.
Como piedra preciosa tiene bastante estima llamándose Crisolita oriental la variedad verdosa y Topacio oriental la más amarilla. La variedad cambiante se talla en cabujón1 del modo que presente mejor sus reflejos.

Alexandrita

La alexandrita, también conocida como alexandrite o alejandrita, es asociada con el signo astrológico de acuario. Su nombre es en homenaje al zar Alexandre II de Rusia.2

Cimofano

También conocida como ojo de gato, es un crisoberilo amarillento translucido, cuyo nombre deriva de la palabra griega que significa "ola"en referencia al efecto óptico tornasol observable en ella. Microestructuras tubulares o inclusiones fusiformes de rutilo con orientación perpendicular al eje c son las responsables de este efecto.

Chrysoberyl

Chrysoberyl

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Chrysoberyl
Chrysoberyl-282796.jpg
General
Category Oxide minerals
Formula
(repeating unit)
BeAl2O4
Strunz classification 04.BA.05
Crystal symmetry Orthorhombic 2/m2/m2/m dipyramidal
Unit cell a = 5.481 Å, b = 9.415 Å, c = 4.428 Å; Z = 8
Identification
Color Various shades of green, yellow, brownish to greenish black, may be raspberry-red under incandescent light when chromian; colorless, pale shades of yellow, green, or red in transmitted light
Crystal habit Crystals tabular or short prismatic, prominently striated
Crystal system Orthorhombic
Twinning Contact and penetration twins common, often repeated forming rosette structures
Cleavage Distinct on (110), imperfect on (010), poor on {001}
Fracture Conchoidal to uneven
Tenacity Brittle
Mohs scale hardness 8.5
Luster Vitreous
Streak White
Specific gravity 3.5 - 3.84
Optical properties Biaxial (+)
Refractive index nα=1.745 nβ=1.748 nγ=1.754
Pleochroism X = red; Y = yellow-orange; Z = emerald-green
2V angle Measured: 70°
References [1][2][3]
Major varieties
Alexandrite Color change; green to red
Cymophane Chatoyant
The mineral or gemstone chrysoberyl is an aluminate of beryllium with the formula BeAl2O4.[3] The name chrysoberyl is derived from the Greek words χρυσός chrysos and βήρυλλος beryllos, meaning "a gold-white spar". Despite the similarity of their names, chrysoberyl and beryl are two completely different gemstones. Chrysoberyl is the third-hardest frequently encountered natural gemstone and lies at 8.5 on the hardness scale, between corundum (9) and topaz (8).[4]
An interesting feature of its crystals are the cyclic twins called trillings. These twinned crystals have a hexagonal appearance, but are the result of a triplet of twins with each "twin" oriented at 120° to its neighbors and taking up 120° of the cyclic trilling. If only two of the three possible twin orientations are present, a "V"-shaped twin results.
Ordinary chrysoberyl is yellowish-green and transparent to translucent. When the mineral exhibits good pale green to yellow color and is transparent, then it is used as a gemstone. The three main varieties of chrysoberyl are: ordinary yellow-to-green chrysoberyl, cat's eye or cymophane, and alexandrite. Yellow-green chrysoberyl was referred to as "chrysolite" during the Victorian and Edwardian eras, which caused confusion since that name has also been used for the mineral olivine ("peridot" as a gemstone); that name is no longer used in the gemological nomenclature.
Alexandrite, a strongly pleochroic (trichroic) gem, will exhibit emerald green, red and orange-yellow colors depending on viewing direction in partially polarised light. However, its most distinctive property is that it also changes color in artificial (tungsten/halogen) light compared to daylight. The color change from red to green is due to strong absorption of light in a narrow yellow portion of the spectrum, while allowing large bands of blue-greener and red wavelengths to be transmitted. Which of these prevails to give the perceived hue depends on the spectral balance of the illumination. Typically, alexandrite has an emerald-green color in daylight (relatively blue illumination of high color temperature) but exhibits a raspberry-red color in incandescent light (relatively yellow illumination).
Cymophane is popularly known as "cat's eye". This variety exhibits pleasing chatoyancy or opalescence that reminds one of an eye of a cat. When cut to produce a cabochon, the mineral forms a light-green specimen with a silky band of light extending across the surface of the stone.

Contents

Occurrence

Chrysoberyl forms as a result of pegmatitic processes. Melting in the Earth's crust produces relatively low-density molten magma which can rise upwards towards the surface. As the main magma body cools, water originally present in low concentrations became more concentrated in the molten rock because it could not be incorporated into the crystallization of solid minerals. The remnant magma thus becomes richer in water, and also in rare elements that similarly do not fit in the crystal structures of major rock-forming minerals. The water extends the temperature range downwards before the magma becomes completely solid, allowing concentration of rare elements to proceed so far that they produce their own distinctive minerals. The resulting rock, igneous in appearance but formed at a low temperature from a water-rich melt, with large crystals of the common minerals such as quartz and feldspar, but also with elevated concentrations of rare elements such as beryllium, lithium, or niobium, often forming their own minerals, is called a pegmatite. The high water content of the magma made it possible for the crystals to grow quickly, so pegmatite crystals are often quite large, which increases the likelihood of gem specimens forming.
Chrysoberyl can also grow in the country rocks near to pegmatites, when Be- and Al-rich fluids from the pegmatite react with surrounding minerals. Hence, it can be found in mica schists and in contact with metamorphic deposits of dolomitic marble. Because it is a hard, dense mineral that is resistant to chemical alteration, it can be weathered out of rocks and deposited in river sands and gravels in alluvial deposits with other gem minerals such as diamond, corundum, topaz, spinel, garnet, and tourmaline. When found in such placers, it will have rounded edges instead of sharp, wedge-shape forms. Much of the chrysoberyl mined in Brazil and Sri Lanka is recovered from placers, as the host rocks have been intensely weathered and eroded.
If the pegmatite fluid is rich in beryllium, crystals of beryl or chrysoberyl could form. Beryl has a high ratio of beryllium to aluminium, while the opposite is true for chrysoberyl. Both are stable with the common mineral quartz. For alexandrite to form, some chromium would also have had to be present. However, beryllium and chromium do not tend to occur in the same types of rock. Chromium is commonest in mafic and ultramafic rocks in which beryllium is extremely rare. Beryllium becomes concentrated in felsic pegmatites in which chromium is almost absent. Therefore, the only situation where an alexandrite can grow is when Be-rich pegmatitic fluids react with Cr-rich country rock. This unusual requirement explains the rarity of this chrysoberyl variety.

Alexandrite

The alexandrite variety displays a color change (alexandrite effect) dependent upon the nature of ambient lighting. Alexandrite effect is the phenomenon of an observed color change from greenish to reddish with a change in source illumination due physiological response of the human eye in a particular part of the visible spectrum. This color change is independent of any change of hue with viewing direction through the crystal that would arise from pleochroism. Alexandrite results from small scale replacement of aluminium by chromium ions in the crystal structure, which causes intense absorption of light over a narrow range of wavelengths in the yellow region of the spectrum.[citation needed]
Alexandrite from the Ural Mountains in Russia is green by daylight and red by incandescent light. Other varieties of alexandrite may be yellowish or pink in daylight and a columbine or raspberry red by incandescent light.
Alexandrite step cut cushion, 26.75 cts.
According to a popular but controversial story, alexandrite was discovered by the Finnish mineralogist Nils Gustaf Nordenskiöld (1792–1866), and named alexandrite in honor of the future Tsar Alexander II of Russia. Nordenskiöld's initial discovery occurred as a result of an examination of a newly found mineral sample he had received from Perovskii, which he identified as emerald at first. [5] The first emerald mine had been opened in 1831.
Alexandrite up to 5 carats (1,000 mg) and larger were traditionally thought to be found only in the Ural Mountains, but have since been found in larger sizes in Brazil. Other deposits are located in India (Andhra Pradesh), Madagascar, and Sri Lanka. Alexandrite in sizes over three carats are very rare.
Some gemstones described as lab-grown (synthetic) alexandrite are actually corundum laced with trace elements (e.g., vanadium) or color-change spinel and are not actually chrysoberyl. As a result, they would be more accurately described as simulated alexandrite rather than synthetic, but are often called Czochralski alexandrite after the process that grows the crystals. [6]

Cymophane

Fine color Cymophane with a sharp and centered eye.
Translucent yellowish chatoyant chrysoberyl is called cymophane or cat's eye. Cymophane has its derivation also from the Greek words meaning 'wave' and 'appearance', in reference to the chatoyancy sometimes exhibited. In this variety, microscopic tubelike cavities or needlelike inclusions [7] of rutile occur in an orientation parallel to the c-axis producing a chatoyant effect visible as a single ray of light passing across the crystal. This effect is best seen in gemstones cut in cabochon form perpendicular to the c-axis. The color in yellow chrysoberyl is due to Fe3+ impurities.
Although other minerals such as tourmaline, scapolite, corundum, spinel and quartz can form "cat's eye" stones similar in appearance to cymophane, the jewelry industry designates these stones as "quartz cat's eyes", or "ruby cat's eyes" and only chrysoberyl can be referred to as "cat's eye" with no other designation.
Gems lacking the silky inclusions required to produce the cat's eye effect are usually faceted. An alexandrite cat's eye is a chrysoberyl cat's eye that changes color. "Milk and honey" is a term commonly used to describe the color of the best cat's eyes. The effect refers to the sharp milky ray of white light normally crossing the cabochon as a center line along its length and overlying the honey colored background. The honey color is considered to be top-grade by many gemologists but the lemon yellow colors are also popular and attractive. Cat's eye material is found as a small percentage of the overall chrysoberyl production wherever chrysoberyl is found.
Cat's eye really became popular by the end of the 19th century when the Duke of Connaught gave a ring with a cat's eye as an engagement token; this was sufficient to make the stone more popular and increase its value greatly. Until that time, cat's eye had predominantly been present in gem and mineral collections. The increased demand in turn created an intensified search for it in Sri Lanka. Early 20th century prices could go up as high as $8000 for a cut stone.[8]

See also

References

  1. ^ Handbook of Mineralogy
  2. ^ Mindat.org
  3. ^ a b Webmineral data
  4. ^ Klein, Cornelis; and Cornelius S. Hurlbut, Jr. (1985). Manual of Mineralogy (20th ed. ed.). New York: Wiley. ISBN 0-471-80580-7.
  5. ^ ""Alexandrite or Diaphanite?". In Alexandrite Tsarstone Collectors Guide.". 2006. Retrieved 2007-07-09.
  6. ^ "Alexandrite Synthetics and Imitations, In Alexandrite Tsarstone Collectors Guide.". 2006. Retrieved 2007-07-09.
  7. ^ "Mitchell, T. E. and Marder, J. M., "Precipitation in Cat's-Eye Chrysoberyl," Electron Microscopy Soc. Proceedings, 1982.

Chrysoberyl

Chrysoberyl

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Chrysoberyl
Chrysoberyl-282796.jpg
General
Category Oxide minerals
Formula
(repeating unit)
BeAl2O4
Strunz classification 04.BA.05
Crystal symmetry Orthorhombic 2/m2/m2/m dipyramidal
Unit cell a = 5.481 Å, b = 9.415 Å, c = 4.428 Å; Z = 8
Identification
Color Various shades of green, yellow, brownish to greenish black, may be raspberry-red under incandescent light when chromian; colorless, pale shades of yellow, green, or red in transmitted light
Crystal habit Crystals tabular or short prismatic, prominently striated
Crystal system Orthorhombic
Twinning Contact and penetration twins common, often repeated forming rosette structures
Cleavage Distinct on (110), imperfect on (010), poor on {001}
Fracture Conchoidal to uneven
Tenacity Brittle
Mohs scale hardness 8.5
Luster Vitreous
Streak White
Specific gravity 3.5 - 3.84
Optical properties Biaxial (+)
Refractive index nα=1.745 nβ=1.748 nγ=1.754
Pleochroism X = red; Y = yellow-orange; Z = emerald-green
2V angle Measured: 70°
References [1][2][3]
Major varieties
Alexandrite Color change; green to red
Cymophane Chatoyant
The mineral or gemstone chrysoberyl is an aluminate of beryllium with the formula BeAl2O4.[3] The name chrysoberyl is derived from the Greek words χρυσός chrysos and βήρυλλος beryllos, meaning "a gold-white spar". Despite the similarity of their names, chrysoberyl and beryl are two completely different gemstones. Chrysoberyl is the third-hardest frequently encountered natural gemstone and lies at 8.5 on the hardness scale, between corundum (9) and topaz (8).[4]
An interesting feature of its crystals are the cyclic twins called trillings. These twinned crystals have a hexagonal appearance, but are the result of a triplet of twins with each "twin" oriented at 120° to its neighbors and taking up 120° of the cyclic trilling. If only two of the three possible twin orientations are present, a "V"-shaped twin results.
Ordinary chrysoberyl is yellowish-green and transparent to translucent. When the mineral exhibits good pale green to yellow color and is transparent, then it is used as a gemstone. The three main varieties of chrysoberyl are: ordinary yellow-to-green chrysoberyl, cat's eye or cymophane, and alexandrite. Yellow-green chrysoberyl was referred to as "chrysolite" during the Victorian and Edwardian eras, which caused confusion since that name has also been used for the mineral olivine ("peridot" as a gemstone); that name is no longer used in the gemological nomenclature.
Alexandrite, a strongly pleochroic (trichroic) gem, will exhibit emerald green, red and orange-yellow colors depending on viewing direction in partially polarised light. However, its most distinctive property is that it also changes color in artificial (tungsten/halogen) light compared to daylight. The color change from red to green is due to strong absorption of light in a narrow yellow portion of the spectrum, while allowing large bands of blue-greener and red wavelengths to be transmitted. Which of these prevails to give the perceived hue depends on the spectral balance of the illumination. Typically, alexandrite has an emerald-green color in daylight (relatively blue illumination of high color temperature) but exhibits a raspberry-red color in incandescent light (relatively yellow illumination).
Cymophane is popularly known as "cat's eye". This variety exhibits pleasing chatoyancy or opalescence that reminds one of an eye of a cat. When cut to produce a cabochon, the mineral forms a light-green specimen with a silky band of light extending across the surface of the stone.

Contents

Occurrence

Chrysoberyl forms as a result of pegmatitic processes. Melting in the Earth's crust produces relatively low-density molten magma which can rise upwards towards the surface. As the main magma body cools, water originally present in low concentrations became more concentrated in the molten rock because it could not be incorporated into the crystallization of solid minerals. The remnant magma thus becomes richer in water, and also in rare elements that similarly do not fit in the crystal structures of major rock-forming minerals. The water extends the temperature range downwards before the magma becomes completely solid, allowing concentration of rare elements to proceed so far that they produce their own distinctive minerals. The resulting rock, igneous in appearance but formed at a low temperature from a water-rich melt, with large crystals of the common minerals such as quartz and feldspar, but also with elevated concentrations of rare elements such as beryllium, lithium, or niobium, often forming their own minerals, is called a pegmatite. The high water content of the magma made it possible for the crystals to grow quickly, so pegmatite crystals are often quite large, which increases the likelihood of gem specimens forming.
Chrysoberyl can also grow in the country rocks near to pegmatites, when Be- and Al-rich fluids from the pegmatite react with surrounding minerals. Hence, it can be found in mica schists and in contact with metamorphic deposits of dolomitic marble. Because it is a hard, dense mineral that is resistant to chemical alteration, it can be weathered out of rocks and deposited in river sands and gravels in alluvial deposits with other gem minerals such as diamond, corundum, topaz, spinel, garnet, and tourmaline. When found in such placers, it will have rounded edges instead of sharp, wedge-shape forms. Much of the chrysoberyl mined in Brazil and Sri Lanka is recovered from placers, as the host rocks have been intensely weathered and eroded.
If the pegmatite fluid is rich in beryllium, crystals of beryl or chrysoberyl could form. Beryl has a high ratio of beryllium to aluminium, while the opposite is true for chrysoberyl. Both are stable with the common mineral quartz. For alexandrite to form, some chromium would also have had to be present. However, beryllium and chromium do not tend to occur in the same types of rock. Chromium is commonest in mafic and ultramafic rocks in which beryllium is extremely rare. Beryllium becomes concentrated in felsic pegmatites in which chromium is almost absent. Therefore, the only situation where an alexandrite can grow is when Be-rich pegmatitic fluids react with Cr-rich country rock. This unusual requirement explains the rarity of this chrysoberyl variety.

Alexandrite

The alexandrite variety displays a color change (alexandrite effect) dependent upon the nature of ambient lighting. Alexandrite effect is the phenomenon of an observed color change from greenish to reddish with a change in source illumination due physiological response of the human eye in a particular part of the visible spectrum. This color change is independent of any change of hue with viewing direction through the crystal that would arise from pleochroism. Alexandrite results from small scale replacement of aluminium by chromium ions in the crystal structure, which causes intense absorption of light over a narrow range of wavelengths in the yellow region of the spectrum.[citation needed]
Alexandrite from the Ural Mountains in Russia is green by daylight and red by incandescent light. Other varieties of alexandrite may be yellowish or pink in daylight and a columbine or raspberry red by incandescent light.
Alexandrite step cut cushion, 26.75 cts.
According to a popular but controversial story, alexandrite was discovered by the Finnish mineralogist Nils Gustaf Nordenskiöld (1792–1866), and named alexandrite in honor of the future Tsar Alexander II of Russia. Nordenskiöld's initial discovery occurred as a result of an examination of a newly found mineral sample he had received from Perovskii, which he identified as emerald at first. [5] The first emerald mine had been opened in 1831.
Alexandrite up to 5 carats (1,000 mg) and larger were traditionally thought to be found only in the Ural Mountains, but have since been found in larger sizes in Brazil. Other deposits are located in India (Andhra Pradesh), Madagascar, and Sri Lanka. Alexandrite in sizes over three carats are very rare.
Some gemstones described as lab-grown (synthetic) alexandrite are actually corundum laced with trace elements (e.g., vanadium) or color-change spinel and are not actually chrysoberyl. As a result, they would be more accurately described as simulated alexandrite rather than synthetic, but are often called Czochralski alexandrite after the process that grows the crystals. [6]

Cymophane

Fine color Cymophane with a sharp and centered eye.
Translucent yellowish chatoyant chrysoberyl is called cymophane or cat's eye. Cymophane has its derivation also from the Greek words meaning 'wave' and 'appearance', in reference to the chatoyancy sometimes exhibited. In this variety, microscopic tubelike cavities or needlelike inclusions [7] of rutile occur in an orientation parallel to the c-axis producing a chatoyant effect visible as a single ray of light passing across the crystal. This effect is best seen in gemstones cut in cabochon form perpendicular to the c-axis. The color in yellow chrysoberyl is due to Fe3+ impurities.
Although other minerals such as tourmaline, scapolite, corundum, spinel and quartz can form "cat's eye" stones similar in appearance to cymophane, the jewelry industry designates these stones as "quartz cat's eyes", or "ruby cat's eyes" and only chrysoberyl can be referred to as "cat's eye" with no other designation.
Gems lacking the silky inclusions required to produce the cat's eye effect are usually faceted. An alexandrite cat's eye is a chrysoberyl cat's eye that changes color. "Milk and honey" is a term commonly used to describe the color of the best cat's eyes. The effect refers to the sharp milky ray of white light normally crossing the cabochon as a center line along its length and overlying the honey colored background. The honey color is considered to be top-grade by many gemologists but the lemon yellow colors are also popular and attractive. Cat's eye material is found as a small percentage of the overall chrysoberyl production wherever chrysoberyl is found.
Cat's eye really became popular by the end of the 19th century when the Duke of Connaught gave a ring with a cat's eye as an engagement token; this was sufficient to make the stone more popular and increase its value greatly. Until that time, cat's eye had predominantly been present in gem and mineral collections. The increased demand in turn created an intensified search for it in Sri Lanka. Early 20th century prices could go up as high as $8000 for a cut stone.[8]

See also

References

  1. ^ Handbook of Mineralogy
  2. ^ Mindat.org
  3. ^ a b Webmineral data
  4. ^ Klein, Cornelis; and Cornelius S. Hurlbut, Jr. (1985). Manual of Mineralogy (20th ed. ed.). New York: Wiley. ISBN 0-471-80580-7.
  5. ^ ""Alexandrite or Diaphanite?". In Alexandrite Tsarstone Collectors Guide.". 2006. Retrieved 2007-07-09.
  6. ^ "Alexandrite Synthetics and Imitations, In Alexandrite Tsarstone Collectors Guide.". 2006. Retrieved 2007-07-09.
  7. ^ "Mitchell, T. E. and Marder, J. M., "Precipitation in Cat's-Eye Chrysoberyl," Electron Microscopy Soc. Proceedings, 1982.

Krizoberill

Krizoberill

A Wikipédiából, a szabad enciklopédiából
Krizoberill
Crisoberilo.jpeg
Adatok
Ásványosztály oxidok és hidroxidok
Kémiai elnevezése berillium-alumínium oxid
Képlete BeAl2O4
Kristályrendszer rombos
Megjelenési forma oszlopos, ritkán táblás, gyakoriak az átnövési ikrek

Sűrűség 3,68-3,78 g/cm³
Keménység 8,5
Hasadás bázis szerint tökéletlen
Törés kagylós
Szín zöld, sárga, barna, vörös, ritkán kék
Porszín fehér
Fény üveges
Átlátszóság átlátszó vagy opak
A krizoberill ásvány (nem összetévesztendő a berillel) egy berillium-alumínium oxid, vegyi képlete BeAl2O4. A krizoberill neve annyit jelent, mint aranyos berill (a görög chrysos és beryllos szavakból származik), mivel a többnyire zöldessárga színű kő igen gyakran aranyos ragyogású, de tiszta sárga-, zöld- és barnaszínű krizoberillek is előfordulnak. Zöldszínű változata az alexandrit. A harmadik legkeményebb természetben is előforduló drágakő (a Mohs-féle keménységi skálán a topáz és korund között található).

Tartalomjegyzék

Ásványtani jellemzői

A krizoberill a rombos rendszerben kristályosodik, többnyire rövid, oszlopos kristályokban, amelyeknek tetején piramislapok jelennek meg. Igen gyakori az ikerképződés és különösen jellemző három kristálynak olymódon való összenövése, hogy az ikerkristály hatszögesnek tűnik. Ez az ikerképződés különösen az alexandriton gyakori. Keménység: 8,5 a Mohs-féle keménységi skála szerint, csak a korund és gyémánt haladja túl. Az optikailag kéttengelyű ásvány karaktere pozitív. A törésmutató értékei egy brazíliai kristályon: α = 1,7470, β = 1,7484, λ = 1,7565, a kettőstörés tehát gyenge. Diszperzió kicsi, 0,015, vagyis színszórása gyenge. A krizoberill üvegfényű, de néha sajátságos zsírfényű is. A drágakőnek használt krizoberillek átlátszók vagy áttetszők. A krizoberill a Röntgen-sugarak nagy részét átengedi.
A sötétebb színű fajták pleokroizmusa (kristálynak ama tulajdonsága, hogy különböző színt mutat, ha a különböző tengelyek irányában nézünk át rajt) igen jelentős. Az alexandrit esetében: α = piros, β = narancssárga, λ = smaragdzöld. E pleokroizmus miatt a csiszolt kő tábláját lehetőleg a zöld szín irányában kell elhelyezni. Az alexandritok között gyakori hármasikreken, az egyes egyének különböző elhelyezkedése miatt, sokszor igen nehéz a legkedvezőbb irány kiválasztása. A krizoberill színező anyaga a vas, amelyhez az alexandritokban króm is járul.
Érdekes tulajdonsága a krizoberillnek, hogy egyes példányain hullámos fényjelenség figyelhető meg, amely különösen a domborúan csiszolt köveken érvényesül. Az ilyen kristályoknak a drágakőpiacon különböző nevük van: cimofán (a görög kyma szó után, melynek jelentése hullám), krizoberill-macskaszem, orientális-, ceyloni vagy indiai macskaszem, opalizáló krizolit. A legszebb krizoberill-macskaszemek Srí Lankából kerülnek forgalomba, melyek ott zöld, sárga és barna színben is találhatók s amelyeken zöldes, kékesfehér vagy aranysárga színekben játszó hullámos fényjáték vonul végig. Minél erősebb ez a jelenség, annál becsesebb a kő. A jelenséget a kő belsejében levő, apró, mikroszkopikus nagyságú s igen nagyszámú csatornácskák okozzák, amelyek a kristály főtengelyével párhuzamos irányban húzódnak. Ezek a csatornácskák üresek, de valamikor valószínűleg ásványanyaggal voltak kitöltve. A csiszolásnál a csatornácskák irányára tekintettel kell lenni. Legjobban érvényesül a habos fényjelenség akkor, ha az ovális alakban csiszolt kő hossztengelye a csatornák irányára merőleges.

Lelőhelyei

Krizoberill
A krizoberill legfontosabb lelőhelyei is Srí Lankán vannak. Saffragam kerület zafírtartalmú üledékrétegeiben, a Ratganga-folyó hordalékában és Matara környékén találhatók nagyszámban. Aranysárga-, sárga-, zöldessárga-, zöldesbarna- és zöldszínűek, nagyságuk 100 karátig is terjed, közöttük sok macskaszem is található.
Brazíliában Minas Gerais tartomány, Minas Novas kerületében, gránitpegmatit üregeiben, valamint ennek elmállott hordalékában szintén találtak krizoberillt. Ezeknek a színe szürkésfehér, halványsárga, citromsárga, kékeszöld, zöld. Az aranysárga, borsárga kövek ritkábbak.

Ciszolása

A krizoberillt lépcsős kőnek is és drágakőnek is csiszolják, míg a macskaszemek kerek vagy ovális domború formában kerülnek forgalomba. A foglalás többnyire szabad, de a nagyon világos és halvány színű köveket szekrénykésen foglalják s a szín emelésére a foglalatba aranylemezt helyeznek.
Különösen kedvelt kő Brazíliában, ahol hibásan sokszor krizolitnak hívják. A két ásvány közt levő hasonlóságra utal a krizolit név használata a krizoberillre különböző jelzőkkel összekötve, úgymint orientális, brazíliai, opalizáló, színtjátszó krizolit, krizolit-krizoberill, chrysolithus. Viszont chrysoberillus névvel egy sárgászöld berillt hívnak. A krizoberill-macskaszem a kvarc-macskaszemmel téveszthető könnyen össze. A kék alexandrit kifejezés zafírt jelent.

Alexandrit

Alexandrit
A szép sötétzöld, fűzöld, néha egész smaragdzöld alexandritnak rendkívül érdekes és jellemző sajátsága a különböző fényben való színváltozása, amely tulajdonsága a legbiztosabb alap a felismerésre. A nappali fényben az alexandrit zöldszínű míg mesterséges sárga fényben vörös- vagy ibolyaszínű. A jelenség oka a sárga és kék fény erős abszorpciója, úgy, hogy csak a piros és zöld sugarak hatolnak keresztül. A kő színe piros vagy zöld aszerint, hogy a beeső sugarak több piros (lámpafény), vagy több zöld fényt (nappali fény) tartalmaznak.
Az alexandritot 1830-ban fedezték fel az Urál-hegységben a későbbi II. Sándor orosz cár nagykorúvá való nyilvánításának napján és így az ő tiszteletére nevezték el. Mivel sokáig csak oroszországi előfordulását ismerték, az oroszok nemzeti kövüknek tekintették s ma is rendkívül nagyra becsülik. Jekatyerinburg mellett,csillámpalákban található nagy mennyiségben. Srí Lankán is előfordul. Az alexandrit értéke jelentős: a jobb kövek ára a gyémántokéval vetekszik.

Cimofán

Cimofán
A cimofán vagy ismertebb nevén macskaszem egy opak, sárgaszínű krizoberill. A kő belsejében levő, apró, mikroszkopikus nagyságú s igen nagyszámú csatornácskák, amelyek a kristály főtengelyével párhuzamos irányban húzódnak és amelyeket rutil tölt ki okozzák az ásványra oly jellemző színjátszó hatást. A sárga színt vas szennyeződés okozza.
A drágakőiparban a macskaszem elnevezéssel kizárólag a krizoberilleket illetik. Hasonló ásványok (melyekkel könnyen összetéveszthető) a kvarc-macskaszem vagy a rubin-macskaszem (ezekben az esetekben a drágakő elnevezése mindig tartalmazza az ásvány tulajdonképpeni nevét is). Legnagyobb lelőhelyei Srí Lanka szigetén vannak.

Külső hivatkozások

Források

  • Dudichné Dr. Vendl Mária, Koch Sándor - A drágakövek, Magyar Természettudományi Társulat, Budapest, 1935
  • Koch Sándor-Sztrókay Kálmán - Ásványtan, Nemzeti Tankönyvkiadó, Budapest, 1994
  • Medenbach, Olaf, Sussieck-Fornefeld, Cornelia - Ásványok, Magyar Könyvklub, Budapest, 1992
  • Oberfrank Ferenc – Rékai Jenő: Drágakövek – Műszaki Könyvkiadó, Budapest, 1993.

Alexandrita

Alexandrita




É um aluminato de berilo (Br O4), variedade gemológica do Crisoberilo. Possui um brilho vítreo e graxo, que varia entre a cor verde quando exposto à luz solar e vermelho quando à luz artificial. Por isso diz-se dele que é uma esmeralda de dia e um rubi à noite. Sua substância corante é o cromo. Traço branco. Fratura concóide, frágil, clivagem perfeita. Encontra-se em placers.
À luz do dia apresenta as colorações verde-amarelada, amarronzada, acinzentada ou azulada. E, à luz artificial apresentara as colorações vermelho-alaranjada, amarronzada ou arroxeada. Existe a variedade alexandrita olho-de-gato (que é bastante rara).
O nome alexandrita devido ao aniversário de 12 anos de idade de Alexandre Nicolaievitch, o futuro czar Alexandre II, que coincidiu com o dia em que o explorador sueco Nils Nordenskiöld encontrou a pedra, pela primeira vez, nos montes Urais da Federação Russa.
Nils Nordenskiöld percebeu que a variação de coloração da pedra encontrada, quando esta se apresentava sob a luz do sol e a luz incandescente, coincidiam com as cores do exército do czar: verde e vermelho. Devido s tal coincidência a Alexandrita passou a ser um símbolo nacional da Rússia.





A Rússia foi o único produtor dessa variedade de crisoberilo por muito tempo, até que, entre 1960 e 1980, devido ao esgotamento de suas reservas, o Sri Lanka passou a ser o produtor mais importante.
A maior alexandrita já lapidada, com 65 quilates, foi encontrada no Sri Lanka e atualmente se encontra no Museu de História Natural de Washington (EUA). Ainda, no Sri Lanka, encontrou-se uma alexandrita que pesou 375g em seu estado bruto.
Entre 1970 e 1980 o Brasil também se tornou um produtor de alexandrita com extrações na Bahia, Espírito Santo e, principalmente, Minas Gerais, onde, inicialmente, a alexandrita era extraída no município de Malacacheta.
Em 1986 descobriu-se grande quantidade dessa gema em Hematita, no município de Antônio Dias, o que provocou o abandono dos demais garimpos. A jazida de hematita levou o Brasil à condição de maior produtor mundial.
Desde 1970 se produz alexandrita sintética, e há também, no mercado, imitações feitas com espinélio sintético, ao qual se adicionou óxido de vanádio.
As imitações são vendidas sob os nomes de Alexandrina, alexandrita sintética ou simplesmente alexandrita, o que pode provocar confusão na hora da compra.