{{Infobox mineral
| name = Wüstite
| category =
| boxwidth =
| boxbgcolor =
| image =
| imagesize =
| caption =
| formula = FeO
| molweight =
| color = Greyish white to yellow or brown; colourless in thin section
| habit = Pyramidic, prismatic
| system = Cubic
| twinning =
| cleavage = {001} perfect
| fracture = Subconchoidal to rough
| mohs = 5 - 5.5
| luster =
| refractive = 1.735 to 2.32 in synthetic crystals
| opticalprop =
| birefringence =
| pleochroism = None
| streak =
| gravity = 5.88
| density = 5.7 g/cm³
| melt =
| fusibility =
| diagnostic =
| solubility = Soluble in dilute
HCl
| diaphaneity =
| other = Forms solid solution with
periclase
}}
'Wüstite' (FeO) is a mineral form of
iron(II) oxide found with
meteorites and native
iron. It has a gray color with a greenish tint in reflected
light. Wüstite crystallizes in the
isometric - hexoctahedral crystal system in opaque to translucent metallic grains. It has a
Mohs hardness of 5 to 5.5 and a
specific gravity of 5.88. Wüstite is a typical example of a
non-stoichiometric compound.
Natural wüstite was discovered in 1927 in Echterdingen,
Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg, Germany, and named for
Ewald Wüst (1875-1934), a German
metallurgist who first synthesized the material at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute in Dusseldorf.
In addition to the type locality in Germany, it has been reported from Disko Island, Greenland; the Jharia coalfield, Bihar, India and as inclusions in
diamonds in a number of
kimberlite pipes. It also is reported from deep sea
manganese nodules.
Its presence indicates a highly
reducing environment.
Wüstite Redox Buffer
: ''Main article:
Mineral redox buffer''
Wüstite, in geochemistry, defines a ''redox buffer'' of oxidation within rocks at which point the rock is so reduced that Fe
3+ and thus
hematite is absent.
As the redox state of a rock is further reduced,
magnetite is converted to wüstite. This occurs by conversion of the Fe
3+ ions in magnetite to Fe
2+ ions. An example reaction is presented below;
# FeO.Fe
2O
3 + C --> 3FeO + CO
''magnetite + graphite/diamond --> wüstite + carbon monoxide''
This is termed a ''redox buffer'' because until all Fe
3+ magnetite is converted to Fe
2+ the oxide mineral assemblage of iron remains wüstite-magnetite, and furthermore the redox state of the rock remains at the same level of
oxygen fugacity. This is similar to buffering in the H
+/OH
- acid-base system of water.
Once the Fe
3+ is consumed, then oxygen must be stripped from the system to further reduce it and wüstite is converted to native iron. The oxide mineral equilibrium assemblage of the rock becomes wüstite-magnetite-iron.
In nature, the only natural systems which are chemically reduced enough to even attain a wüstite-magnetite composition are rare, including carbonate-rich
skarns, meteorites and perhaps the mantle where reduced carbon is present, exemplified by the presence of
diamond and/or
graphite.
Effects upon silicate minerals
''Main article:
Normative mineralogy''
The ratio of Fe
2+ to Fe
3+ within a rock determines, in part, the silicate mineral assemblage of the rock. Within a rock of a given chemical composition, iron enters minerals based on the bulk chemical composition and the mineral phases which are stable at that temperature and pressure. Iron may only enter minerals such as
pyroxene and
olivine if it is present as Fe
2+; Fe
3+ cannot enter the lattice of fayalite olivine and thus for every two Fe
3+ ions, one Fe
2+ is used and one molecule of magnetite is created.
In chemically reduced rocks, magnetite may be absent due to the propensity of iron to enter olivine, and wüstite may only be present if there is an excess of iron above what can be used by silica. Thus, wüstite may only be found in silica-undersaturated compositions which are also heavily chemically reduced, satisfying both the need to remove all Fe
3+ and to maintain iron outside of silicate minerals.
In nature, carbonate rocks, potentially
carbonatite,
kimberlites, carbonate-bearing melilitic rocks and other rare alkaline rocks may satisfy these criteria. However, wüstite is not reported in most of these rocks in nature, potentially because the redox state necessary to drive magnetite to wüstite is so rare.
Related minerals
Wüstite forms a solid solution with
periclase (MgO), and Fe substitutes for Mg. Periclase, when hydrated, forms
brucite (Mg(OH)
2), a common product of
serpentinite metamorphic reactions.
Oxidation of wüstite forms goethite-limonite.
Zinc, aluminium and other transition metals may substitute for Fe in wüstite.
Wüstite in dolomite skarns may be related to
siderite (Fe-carbonate),
wollastonite,
enstatite,
diopside and
magnesite.
See also
★
Normative mineralogy
★
Redox
★
Kimberlite
★
Skarn
★
Periclase
References
★
Mineral Data Pub. PDF file Accessed 3/5/2006
★
Euromin Accessed 3/5/2006
★
Wüstite on Mindat.org Accessed 3/5/2006
★
Webmineral data Accessed 3/5/2006