IC 7149 Marketing Of Barite ? Properties

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Bertrand L. Johnson
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
18
File Size:
6951 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1941

Abstract

Barite, the natural sulfate of barium (BaSO4), is the most important barium mineral. Normally it is white (opaque to translucent), but impurities sometimes render it yellow, gray, blue, brown, red, or black. Brown or red stains are commonly caused by iron oxide. Barite is unusually heavy (specific gravity, about 4.5); in fact, it is one of the heaviest of the nonmetallic minerals. It is brittle and fractures unevenly. The hardness of barite ranges from 2.5 to 3 but is usually about 3. It can be scratched by a copper coin. Pure barite contains 65.7 percent BaO and A.3 percent S03. Much of the crude barite ore mined, however, contains impurities; thus it has a lower content of barite and consequently less barium oxide. Commercial analyses show its total BaSO4 content. Barium also occurs in nature as the mineral witherite (BaCO3), which, however, is not common in the United States, and commercial deposits have been found only in California. Witherite is a yellowish-white, light-gray, or Kite mineral with a specific gravity of about 3, a hardness of 3 to 4, and an uneven to subconchoidal fracture.
Citation

APA: Bertrand L. Johnson  (1941)  IC 7149 Marketing Of Barite ? Properties

MLA: Bertrand L. Johnson IC 7149 Marketing Of Barite ? Properties. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1941.

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