Gem Classification: Opal, Spinel, Chrysoberyl, Glass Silicates

The opal, spinel, chrysoberyl and glass silicates mineral species and their chemical composition and elements

Opal. The opal may be considered along with the quartz gems, because, like them, it is composed mainly of oxide of silicon, but the opal also has water combined with the silicon oxide (not merely imprisoned in it). Thus opal is a hydrous form of silica (hydrous comes from the Greek word for water).

Spinel. All our other stones are of more complicated chemical composition than the preceding. Coming now to mineral species which have three chemical elements in them we may consider first spinel, which has the two metallic elements aluminum and magnesium and the non-metallic element oxygen in it. It is virtually a compound of the two oxides, aluminum oxide and magnesium oxide. The variously colored spinels, like the various corundums, all have the same properties, thus they are all of hardness 8 or a little higher, they all have single refraction, and all have specific gravity 3.60.

Chrysoberyl. Another mineral species which, like spinel, has just three elements in its composition is chrysoberyl. This mineral contains the metals aluminum and berylium combined with the non-metal oxygen. Thus it is really to be regarded as a compound of the two oxides, aluminum oxide and berylium oxide. This species furnishes us Alexandrite, chrysoberyl cat's-eye and less valuable chrysoberyls of yellowish green color. All are of the one species, the marked color difference being due to the presence of different impurities. The cat's-eye effect in one of the varieties is due to the internal structure rather than to the nature of the material.

The Silicates. Nearly all of the remaining precious stones belong to a great group of mineral species known as the silicates. These are so called because they consist largely of oxide of silicon (the material above referred to under quartz gems). This oxide of silicon is not free and separate in the silicates but is combined chemically with other oxides, chiefly with metallic oxides. Thus there are many different silicates because, in the earth, many different metallic oxides have combined with silicon oxide. Also in many cases two or three or even more metallic oxides have combined with silicon oxide to make single new compounds.

Glass a Mixture of Silicates. Those who are familiar with glass making may receive some help at this point by remembering that the various glasses are silicates, for they are made by melting sand (which is nearly pure oxide of silicon) with various metallic oxides. With lime (calcium oxide) and soda (which yields sodium oxide) we get soda-lime glass (common window glass). Lead oxide being added to the mixture a dense, very brilliant, but soft glass (flint glass) results. Cut glass dishes and "paste" gems are made of this flint glass. Now the glasses, although they are silicates, are not crystalline, but rather they are amorphous, that is, without any definite structure. Nature's silicates, on the other hand, are usually crystallized or at least crystalline in structure. (In a few cases we find true glasses, volcanic glass, or obsidian, for example.)


Copyright 2004 by JJKent, Inc

You are here: JJKent Home >> Precious Stones Guide Vol 7 >> Gem Classification: Opal, Spinel, Chrysoberyl, Glass Silicates 

<<Gem Classification: Carbon and Quartz Mineral Species Gem Classification: Mineral Silicates>>


DISCLAIMER: PLEASE READ - By printing, downloading, or using you agree to our full terms. Review the full terms at the following URL: http://www.pagewise.com/disclaimer.html.