Anatase

Anatase

[

Crystals from Gouveia, Minas Gerais, Brazil
]

Anatase is one of the three mineral forms of titanium dioxide, the other two being brookite and rutile. It is always found as small, isolated and sharply developed crystals, and like rutile, a more commonly occurring modification of titanium dioxide, it crystallizes in the tetragonal system; but, although the degree of symmetry is the same for both, there is no relation between the interfacial angles of the two minerals, except, of course, in the prism-zone of 45° and 90°. The common pyramid of anatase, parallel to the faces of which there are perfect cleavages, has an angle over the polar edge of 82°9', the corresponding angle of rutile being 56°52½'. It was on account of this steeper pyramid of anatase that the mineral was named, by RJ Haüy in 1801, from the Greek "anatasis", "extension," the vertical axis of the crystals being longer than in rutile. There are also important differences between the physical characters of anatase and rutile; the former is not quite so hard (H=5½–6) or dense (specific gravity 3.9); it is optically negative, rutile being positive; and its lustre is even more strongly adamantine or metallic-adamantine than that of rutile.

Two types or habits of anatase crystals may be distinguished. The commoner occurs as simple acute double pyramids with an indigo-blue to black colour and steely lustre. Crystals of this kind are abundant at Le Bourg-d'Oisans in Dauphiné, where they are associated with rock-crystal, feldspar, and axinite in crevices in granite and mica-schist. Similar crystals, but of microscopic size, are widely distributed in sedimentary rocks, such as sandstones, clays, and slates, from which they may be separated by washing away the lighter constituents of the powdered rock.

Crystals of the second type have numerous pyramidal faces developed, and they are usually flatter or sometimes prismatic in habit; the colour is honey-yellow to brown. Such crystals closely resemble xenotime in appearance and, indeed, were for a long time supposed to belong to this species, the special name "wiserine" being applied to them. They occur attached to the walls of crevices in the gneisses of the Alps, the Binnenthal near Brig in canton Valais, Switzerland, being a well-known locality.

When heated above 915°C, anatase is converted into rutile, changing in specific gravity to 4.1; naturally occurring pseudomorphs of rutile after anatase are also known. Crystals of anatase have and continue to be artificially prepared in laboratories by chemical methods such as sol-gel processing. Examples include controlled hydrolysis of TiCl4 or of titanium alkoxides. Such synthetic anatases are of considerable interest for photocatalysis and for Graetzel-cell photovoltaics.

Another name commonly in use for this mineral is "octahedrite", a name which, indeed, is earlier than anatase, and given because of the common (acute) octahedral habit of the crystals. Other names, now obsolete, are oisanite and dauphinite, from the well-known French locality.

References

*1911

See also

* List of minerals
* Adularia


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Anatase — Catégorie IV : oxydes et hydroxydes[1] Anatase St Christophe en Oisans France …   Wikipédia en Français

  • anatase — ● anatase nom féminin (grec anatasis, extension) Oxyde de titane naturel, quadratique, de couleur bleu indigo, jaune ou brun, dénommé aussi octaédrite …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • anatase — [an′ə tāz΄] n. [Fr < Gr anatasis, prolongation < ana , up + tasis, a stretching < stem of teinein: see TEND2; so named because of its long crystals] a dark colored, hard, tetragonal form of titanium dioxide, usually found in schist and… …   English World dictionary

  • anatase — /an euh tays , tayz /, n. Mineral. a naturally occurring crystalline form of titanium dioxide, TiO2. Also called octahedrite. [1835 45; < F < Gk anátasis, equiv. to ana ANA + ta (var. s. of teínein to stretch) + sis SIS] * * * ▪ mineral       one …   Universalium

  • anatase — anatazas statusas T sritis chemija apibrėžtis Mineralas. formulė TiO₂ atitikmenys: angl. anatase rus. анатаз …   Chemijos terminų aiškinamasis žodynas

  • anatase — noun Etymology: French, from Greek anatasis extension, from anateinein to extend, from ana + teinein to stretch more at thin Date: circa 1828 a tetragonal mineral consisting of titanium dioxide and used especially as a white pigment …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • anatase — noun a blue or brown mineral, a form of titanium dioxide, used as a pigment Syn: octahedrite …   Wiktionary

  • anatase — an·a·tase …   English syllables

  • anatase — an•a•tase [[t]ˈæn əˌteɪs, ˌteɪz[/t]] n. mir a naturally occurring crystalline form of titanium dioxide, TiO2 • Etymology: 1835–45; < F < Gk anátasis extension, der. (with sis sis) ofanateíneinto extend (ana ana +teínein to stretch) …   From formal English to slang

  • anatase — /ˈænəteɪz/ (say anuhtayz) noun a black to brown mineral, titanium dioxide, TiO2, occurring in octahedral crystals; octahedrite. {French, from Greek anatasis extension} …  

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