The Colors of Sillimanite
George R. Rossman
Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences
California Institute of Technoogy
Pasadena, CA 91125
Edward S. Grew, Wayne A. Dollase
Department of Earth and Space Sciences
University of California
Los Angeles, CA 90024
Abstract
Sillimanite occurs in three colored varieties: yellow, brown, and blue.
The yellow color is characteristic of unaltered single crystals of
sillimanite from high-grade metamorphic rocks and associated
pegmatites. Such sillimanites contain up to 1.8 wt.% Fe2O3
and up to 0.3% Cr2O3. The
yellow color is due to Fe3+, or in a few cases,
to Cr3+. The ion dominant in the optical
spectrum of sillimanite containing negligible Cr3+
is Fe3+ in tetrahedral coordination. However,
Mossbauer data suggest that about 80% of the iron is in octahedral
coordination and only 20% in tetrahedral coordination. The salient
features in the optical spectrum from Fe3+ are
absorption bands at 462, 440, and 412 nm in a, 616, 474, and 438 nm in
y, and 361 nm in α and γ. No evidence for Fe2+
was found. Absorption from Cr3+ occurs near 620
and 423 nm. The brown variety is also formed in high-grade metamorphic
rocks and associated pegmatites; some brown sillimanite is chatoyant
from abundant acicular inclusions oriented parallel to c. Brown
sillimanite generally contains 1 or more wt.% Fe2O3.
Optical absorption spectra of brown sillimanite include some of the
iron features characteristic of yellow sillimanite and prominent bands
at ~452 nm and 542 nm. These last two bands may be due to incipient
exsolution of an iron-rich phase, which appears to constitute the
inclusions. Blue sillimanite has been documented from crustal xenoliths
in basalt at two localities and from alluvial deposits at two other
localities. Blue sillimanite contains no more than 1 wt.% Fe2O3.
The prominent absorption features, restricted to γ, consist of
two bands at 595 and ~836 nm. The spectra are similar to those of blue
kyanite. As with kyanite, it is likely that the coloration is the
result of intervalence charge transfer although the intensity of the
absorption bands is not correlated with either Fe or Ti content.
last updated: 3-Sep-2017