What Are the Types of Gypsum Ore and Their Properties?

Alex

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Gypsum is a calcium sulphate mineral in non-metallic sulphates.

It is widely used:

  • in building materials, such as cement retarder, gypsum products for construction and cementing materials;
  • as the soil improver, fertilizer and pesticide in agriculture;
  • in papermaking, paint, rubber, ceramics, plastics, textile, food, arts and crafts, culture, education and medicine;
  • as raw materials for the manufacture of sulfuric acid and ammonium sulfate in the absence of other sulfur resources.

Two main classes of gypsum ore​

Generally speaking, gypsum refers to two minerals, gypsum and anhydrite. They are often produced together and can be transformed into each other under certain geological effects.

2 main classes of gypsum ore

2 main classes of gypsum ore

TypesGypsum (Dihydrate gypsum or Plaster)Anhydrite
Chemical formulaCaSO4·2H2OCaSO4
Chemical composition32.6% of CaO, 46.5% of SO3, 0.9% of H2O2+41.2% of CaO and 58.8% of SO3
Crystal systemmonoclinicorthorhombic
Crystal habittabular, dense massive, fibrous tabulardense massive, granulous
Colorwhite, gray, red, brownwhite, off-white
Lustervitreous, silkyvitreous
Hardness23~3.5
Density2.3 g/cm32.8~3.0 g/cm3
Cleavage{010} perfect{010} perfect

14 subclasses of gypsum ore​

According to the crystal form, structure and material composition of gypsum, it can be further divided into the following 14 subcategories:

fibrous plaster, giant-pegmatite gypsum, gypsum, argillaceous (clay) gypsum, carbonate gypsum, anhydrite-gypsum, argillaceous (clay) anhydrite-gypsum, carbonate anhydrite-gypsum, gypsum-anhydrite, argillaceous (clay) gypsum-anhydrite, carbonate gypsum-anhydrite, anhydrite, argillaceous (clay) anhydrite and carbonate anhydrite.

14 subclasses of gypsum ore

14 subclasses of gypsum ore

Fibrous plaster is milky white or wax yellow, with a fibrous structure. It's often in the form of veins, nets, lenses or thin interlayers together with gypsum and anhydrite layers. The blue-gray giant-pegmatite gypsum ore is mainly composed of crystal clusters, granular gypsum and clay minerals.

Gypsum (or common) ore

Gypsum (or common) ore is white, green, gray or light yellow. It is massive and granular structure. Its main minerals include dihydrate, a small amount of anhydrite (the sum of the two is over 85%), and a small amount of dolomite, calcite and clay minerals.
The colorless and transparent pure gypsum is called selenite, while recrystallized fine granular aggregate is called alabaster (crystal gypsum).

The argillaceous (clay) gypsum ore is gray, blue-gray, gray-black, with the main minerals including gypsum, anhydrite, montmorillonite, hydromica, dolomite, calcite, quartz, organic matter and asphalt. It has the tabular, fibrous, granular crystalloblastic texture, or earthy, massive, lamellar, star structure.

Carbonate gypsum ore is gray, dark gray, granular, brecciated. Its main mineral is gypsum, containing dolomite, calcite and anhydrite.

Anhydrite ore is dense and hard with the color of white, gray or light blue. The main minerals are anhydrite, gypsum (the sum of the two is greater than 85%), a small amount of montmorillonite, hydromica, dolomite, calcite and celestine. It has the granular, scaly, fibrous crystalloblastic texture, or crumby, lamellar, porphyritic, brecciated-vein structure.

According to the mineral composition and content of the ore, the gypsum ore can be divided into the following types:

TypesMain mineral componentsRemarks
Main classesSubclassesGypsumImpurity minerals
Gypsum (Gypsum ≥ Anhydrite)Gypsum: (Gypsum / Gypsum+ Anhydrite) ≥75%Fibrous plasterGypsumGypsum must be obtained through mineral processing.
Giant-pegmatite gypsumGypsumGypsum can be obtained by mineral processing or without mineral processing.
GypsumGypsum (+Anhydrite)>85%Without mineral processing
Argillaceous (clay) gypsumGypsumClay minerals
Carbonate gypsumGypsumCarbonate
Anhydrite-gypsum: 50% ≤ (Gypsum÷Gypsum + Anhydrite) < 75%Anhydrite-gypsumGypsum, Anhydrite: (Gypsum + Anhydrite) > 85%
Argillaceous gypsum-anhydriteGypsum, AnhydriteClay minerals
Carbonate anhydrite-gypsumGypsum, AnhydriteCarbonate
Anhydrite (Gypsum < Anhydrite)Gypsum-anhydrite: 25% ≤ (Gypsum / Gypsum+ Anhydrite) < 50%Gypsum-anhydriteAnhydrite-gypsum: (Gypsum + Anhydrite) > 85%
Argillaceous (clay) gypsum-anhydriteAnhydrite, GypsumClay minerals
Carbonate gypsum-anhydriteGypsum, AnhydriteCarbonate
Anhydrite: (Gypsum / Gypsum+ Anhydrite) < 25%AnhydriteAnhydrite (+Gypsum) > 85%
Argillaceous (clay) anhydriteAnhydriteClay minerals
Carbonate anhydriteAnhydriteCarbonate
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Author : Jordan
 
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