Saturday, March 18, 2023

IT'S THAT DANG CUROSITY AGAIN: THE SULFARSENIDE COBALTITE

The important thing is not to stop questioning. Curiosity has its own reason for existing.    Einstein

In my last posting on rouxelite I noted the mineral was a member of the Sulfide Class, minerals containing either the sulfide anion S2-or the disulfide anion S22-, that is either one or two sulfur ions, each with an oxidation state of 2 minus (2--). The formula is often written as AmSn where A is a metal, often iron, copper nickel, lead, silver or zinc, S is sulfur, and m and n are numbers indicating cations /anions present. Most rockhounds will recognize the iron sulfide mineral, pyrite—FeS2. (one iron cation and two sulfur (a disulfide) anions. Or perhaps galena, the lead sulfide PbS—one lead cation and one sulfur anion.

One of the more interesting and complex group of sulfides are the sulfosalts. These minerals contain: 1) a metal (mostly lead, copper, iron or silver although a few others, mercury, zinc, vanadium may be present); 2) a semi-metal like arsenic, germanium, antimony, or the post-transitional metal bismuth, or the metals tin or vanadium’ and 3) sulfur but perhaps selenium or tellurium (Richards, 1999). In case you are wondering, semi-metals are elements with properties both of a metal and of a non-metal and are the following: boron, silicon, germanium, polonium, arsenic, antimony, tellurium, and tennessine (radioactive, artificially produced element).  All are interesting elements: each semi-metal takes several different forms (allotropes), but all have at least one form that is shiny and metallic looking.  All are solid at room temperature and pressure, and act as nonmetals in chemical reactions. They are poor conductors of electricity (unlike metals) but make excellent semiconductors. Most are malleable and some are ductile, Semi-metals can form alloys with metals and a lead-antimony combination is an important industrial component of batteries and cable sheaths. Most semi-metals are rarely found in the natural state but are common in combination with other elements. For example, silicon is the second most abundant element on our earth (after oxygen) but does not occur uncombined in nature. So, these are the semi-metals and sulfosalts. Interesting? Yes! 

The sulfarsenide minerals are also a group of sulfides with metal(s) plus semi-metal(s) plus sulfur and therefore must seem related to the sulfosalts. However, there is a big difference in the two groups in that the semi-metal arsenic has moved from a positively charged cation to replacing some of the sulfur as a negatively charged anion as in the minerals arsenopyrite [FeAsS] and cobaltite [CoAsS]. These minerals confuse me (not hard) since I did not realize that both sulfur and arsenic may have oxidation states of 1 minus so cobaltite is Co2+, S1- and As1- . Because the −1 oxidation states for S and As are not stable in solution, the mineral reactions always involve oxidation of the S and As to some higher oxidation state in order to be released into solution (https://chem.libretexts.org/). 

I recently acquired a couple of micromounts of cobaltite that exhibit really nice crystals. One specimen is from Håkansboda, Bergslagen Mining District, Sweden, and was, at one time in the collection of Al Kidwell (he of kidwellite fame—see Posting July 7, 2015). As best I can determine the stratigraphy of Bergslagen [part of a Precambrian Shield] is quite complex with original volcanic and sedimentary rocks of Precambrian age [1.8-1.9 Ga] intruded by granite, folded and faulted, and then invaded by hydrothermally emplaced sulfides (pyrite, chalcopyrite, sphalerite, and galena) when the hot fluid interacted with carbonates and mixed with cool seawater in a seafloor environment (Kampmann and others, 2017).

Håkansboda is a very old mining district (at least to U.S. standards) and started some time in the 1400s but was never a large producer (Falun was the 800 pound gorilla in the region—see Posting July 1, 2020. Tegengren (1914 in MinDat) noted that total copper production from 1613 until 1905 was about 2100 tons with 7 tons of cobalt during 1836-1841. Currently the Håkansboda ore field is under intensive investigations and has shown good potential for copper, cobalt, iron, zinc, lead, silver, nickel, and potentially REE’s (Månbro, 2021). Although most cobalt production was as a byproduct of copper mining, some cobaltite ore is present and has produced many of the finest crystals in the world.

Cobaltite crystal. Width of crystal ~1.5 mm.

The second micro was collected by a J. Seguin in Ontario, Canada, and mounted in 1973 by Art Smith. I could not locate good information on Seguin and I presume the crystal was collected from the most famous locality in the Cobalt/Sudbury, Ontario, Mining District, the “Brazil Lake occurrence.” According to Sabina (1991) cobaltite euhedral crystals measuring up to 3 cm in diameter occur with actinolite amphibolite along the walls of a quartz-dolomite calcite vein containing pyrrhotite and chalcopyrite.

Cobaltite crystals on a micromount stand. Width FOV ~6 mm.

 The Cobalt, Ontario, portion of the District is located northeast of the town of Sudbury and regardless of its name, silver was the major metallic commodity. At one time in the early 1900s the Cobalt area mines were the world’s largest producer of silver and total production over the years totaled nearly a thousand tons.  The silver was associated with nickel and arsenic minerals like skutterudite.

I was unable to locate exact production figures of cobalt and nickel for the Cobalt area; however, Young and Perrone (2013) noted that “small high-grade deposits of nickel-cobalt arsenides furnish significant quantities of cobalt. Arsenide ores from Cobalt, Ontario, gave Canada world leadership in production for the period 1905-25. Cobalt output from this area stopped in 1971 but was reactivated in 1995 as a primary production center and now seems a major producer.

 Pink cobalt bloom (erythrite) on specimen from Cobalt, Ontario, Canada.  Width FOV ~7 mm.

Cobalt is a critical mineral in today’s high-tech and electronic world, especially for use in rechargeable batteries, to strengthen steel and other metals, and to construct rare-earth magnets. In the latter use cobalt is combined with samarium (SmCo) to create magnets with  good temperature stability and a strong resistance to corrosion. In regards to batteries, the public always hears about the need for lithium; however, cobalt, nickel, and graphite are also critical components.

Although cobalt is present as a component in many minerals, most cobalt-containing ores are mined for other minerals such as gold, zinc, silver, lead, copper, and nickel. The cobalt is then harvested as a by-product.

Most cobalt on the market comes from the mining of: 1) nickel/cobalt ores of chalcopyrite, pyrrhotite, pentlandite (nickel, iron sulfide), cobaltite and others. Pentlandite is the major nickel sulfide although other minerals on the list often contain smaller amounts. The major mines of these magmatic sulfide deposits include Noril’sk-Talnakh (Russia), Sudbury (Canada), and Kambalda (Australia); 2) copper/cobalt ores from the Central African Copper belt in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and neighboring Zambia. Here cobalt deposits usually consist of two layers: a) weathered “oxide” surface containing mainly heterogenite CoO(OH);  and b) unweathered Cu,Co “sulfide” deposits below these “oxide” caps containing mainly carrollite Co2CuS4.


The photomicrograph does not do justice to the mirror faces of this altered cube, maybe a cubo-octahedron., of carrollite (C). A gemmy poker chip of calcite (Ca) is attached at lower right.  The calcite rhombs (CA) form the matrix.  I don't have the slightest idea what the small green crystals (?) scattered on the matrix represent. Width of carrollite crystal ~3.2 mm.

A third major source of cobalt is the Moroccan cobalt–arsenic ores in the Bou-Azzer deposit, about the only mines in the world where cobalt is produced as a primary product.  Here the major cobalt producing minerals are skutterudite (CoAs3 or (Co,Fe,Ni)As2-3) and erythrite (Co3(AsO4)2 · 8H2O).

Specimen of Specimen of skutterudite from Morocco with nice octahedral crystals on fresh surface. The majority of the surface, bottom and sides of specimen, is massive and granular.  White mineral is calcite.  Specimen is difficult to photograph as bright metallic luster reflects light.  Length of specimen ~4 cm.

 


Photomicrograph clusters of erythrite sheaths from Bou Azzer.

Minor sources of cobalt come from nickel-cobalt laterite deposits where enrichments of Ni-Co from from intense chemical and mechanical weathering of ultramafic parent rocks such as dunite and “serpentinite.” The major lateritic mines operating today are in New Caledonia, a French Territory in the South Pacific. Future cobalt resources might come from manganese nodules and cobalt-rich crust on ocean seafloors.

OK, so cobalt is a valuable component needed for batteries in electric vehicles, now what? In reading about cobalt resources, I noted there are serious concerns about child labor and environmental contamination in the Central African Co/Ni Belt. Sudbury and the Canadian Cobalt Belt have faced serious environmental disasters in the past and problems still exist. The U.S Congress would like to source critical minerals from countries other than China and Russia; however, obtaining mining permits in the U.S is a multi-year task, and perhaps with good reason!

The only major cobalt mine in the lower 48 was the Blackbird Mine near Challis, and Cobalt, Idaho. The Blackbird closed in the early 1980s after more than 30 years of intermittent operations. By then, the surrounding creeks were lifeless; heavy-metal pollution had killed off most of their fish and aquatic insects.  Today, the 10,830-acre Mine is now a toxic waste site. The Superfund Site includes a 12-acre open pit, 4.8 million tons of waste rock, 2 million tons of tailings, and enough tunnels that, if they were strung together, you could run a half marathon in them and still have nearly a mile to spare. Over the past 26 years, the Blackbird Mine Site Group has restored creeks, sealed off mine portals, and constructed an intricate system of ponds and ditches designed to separate clean water from contaminated water. The end date for restoration is unknown; however, in the early 2000s, Chinook salmon returned to nearby Panther Creek. (Holtz, 2022).

The Blackbird sits in the Idaho Cobalt Belt, a 34-mile-long area in the Salmon-Challis National Forest that contains some of the largest cobalt deposits in the country. As the global market for lithium-ion batteries has grown—and the price of cobalt along with it—so has commercial interest in the belt. At least six mining companies have applied for permits from the U.S. Forest Service to operate in the region. Most of these companies are in the early stages of exploration; one has started to build a mine (Holtz, 2022).

The US Geological Survey has spent decades studying the cobalt belt and noted the belt is an alignment of deposits composed of cobaltite, cobaltiferous pyrite, pyrrhotite, arsenopyrite, chalcopyrite, and gold with anomalous rare-earth elements in a quartz-biotite-tourmaline gangue hosted in Mesoproterozoic metasedimentary rocks of the Lemhi Group.

I have a small specimen (toenail) purchased from a now defunct rock/mineral store over two decades ago. It has an older label stating “cobaltite, Cobalt, Idaho.” Good photos of Idaho cobalt seem tough to locate. The photo below seems to indicate cobaltite, arsenopyrite, and chalcopyrite.

 



Specimen of cobalt-bearing minerals from Cobalt, Idaho. Width FOV ~6 mm.
 

Several years ago, maybe in the early 1980s/late 1970s, I spent a few days up in the Salmon-Challis National Forest near Challis trying to clear a site (look for fossils) for a possible fluorite mine. I don’t remember much except it was in the Bayhorse Mining District, a fantastic “Ghost Town” was well preserved, and the only fossils I could locate were Ordovician? graptolites. I never found out if the mine was permitted.

In news from Canada, I read in Mining.com about New road paves the way for Canada’s first primary cobalt mine. “Evidently a new paved road has been constructed to the NICO deposit in Canada’s Northwest Territories that was discovered by Fortune Minerals in 1996. NICO is a fully vertically integrated project that will include mining and concentrating ores in the Northwest Territories, and transportation of the metal concentrate to the proposed refinery in Alberta for further processing to high value metal and chemical products. NICO is positioned to stand out as a North American asset dedicated to the production of cobalt chemicals needed to manufacture rechargeable batteries used in electric vehicles, stationary power storage applications, and portable electronics such as smart phones, tablets and laptops. The unique metal assemblage of the deposit also includes more than 10% of global bismuth reserves along with significant gold as a counter cyclical hedge to reduce exposure to cobalt and bismuth price volatility.”

So, if you are investor (probably younger) who likes to take chances with your money, consider cobalt or lithium or one of the REEs. At my age any “extra” resources (as if there is any) goes into U.S. Treasury Bills or Notes. The boys and girls in Washington better not default on the budget!!!

REFERENCES CITED

Holtz, M., 2022, Idaho Is Sitting on One of the Most Important Elements on Earth: The Atlantic https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2022/01/cobalt-clean-energy-climate-change-idaho/621321/

Månbro, C., 2021, The Geology and Geochemistry of the Håkansboda Cu-Co deposit, Bergslagen, Sweden: M.S. Thesis, Stockholm University.

Kampmann, T., Jansson, N., Stephens, M., Majka, J., Lasskogen, J., 2017, Systematics of Hydrothermal Alteration at the Falun Base Metal Sulfide Deposit and Implications for Ore Genesis and Exploration, Bergslagen Ore District, Fennoscandian Shield, Sweden: Economic Geology v. 112, no. 5.

Sabina, A.P.,1991, Rocks and Minerals for the Collector: Sudbury to Winnipeg. Geological Survey of Canada Miscellaneous Report 49: https://geoscan.nrcan.gc.ca/starweb/geoscan/servlet.starweb?path=geoscan/fulle.web&search1=R=132238

Tegengren, F.,1924, (in MinDat): Sveriges ädlare malmer och bergverk (in Swedish). SGU ser Ca17, Stockholm.

Young, R.S. and L. Perrone, 2013, Cobalt:  www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca

My non-investing advice: The most important thing is to live an interesting life. Keep your eyes, ears and heart open. Talk to people and visit interesting places, and don't forget to ask questions. Drink in the world around you so it's always there in your head.      Michael Morpurgo