- For the artificial intelligence androids of the 1990s science fiction series Space: Above and Beyond, see Silicate (AI)
Silicate rock[]
In geology and astronomy, the term silicate is used to denote types of rock that consist predominantly of silicate minerals. Such rocks include a wide range of igneous, metamorphic and sedimentary types. Most of the Earth's mantle and crust are made up of silicate rocks. The same is true of the Moon and the other rocky planets.
On Earth, a wide variety of silicate minerals occur in an even wider range of combinations as a result of the processes that form and re-work the crust. These processes include partial melting, crystallization, fractionation, metamorphism, weathering and diagenesis. Living things also contribute to the silicate cycle near the Earth's surface. A type of plankton known as diatoms construct their exoskeletons, known as tests, from silica. The tests of dead diatoms are a major constituent of deep ocean sediment
Silicates have been observed in space, around evolved stars and planetary nebulae such as NGC 6302. They are found in both amorphous form and crystalline form, though the range of types that have been found is far smaller than those found on Earth.
Mineralogy[]
- Main gallery: Silicate minerals.
Mineralogically, silicate minerals are divided according to structure of their silicate anion into the following groups:
- Nesosilicates (lone tetrahedron) - [SiO4]4−, eg olivine.
- Sorosilicates (double tetrahedra) - [Si2O7]6−, eg epidote.
- Cyclosilicates (rings) - [SinO3n]2n−, eg tourmaline group.
- Inosilicates (single chain) - [SinO3n]2n−, eg pyroxene group.
- Inosilicates(double chain) - [Si4nO11n]6n−, eg amphibole group.
- Phyllosilicates (sheets) - [Si2nO5n]2n−, eg micas and clays.
- Tectosilicates (3D framework) - [AlxSiyO2(x+y)]x−, eg quartz, feldspars, zeolites.
Note that tectosilicates can only have additional cations if some of the silicon is replaced by a lower-charge cation such as aluminium, to give a negative charge overall. This substitution can also take place in other types of silicate.
Some rare minerals have more than one type of anion coexisting in their crystal structures, or complex-shaped anions that are intermediate between the simple types above.
als:Silikat ca:Silicat cs:Křemičitany de:Silicate es:Silicato eo:Silikato fr:Silicate hr:Silikati id:Silikat it:Silicato he:סיליקט nl:Silicaat ja:ケイ酸塩 pl:Krzemiany pt:Silicato ru:Силикаты (минералы) sk:Kremičitan sr:Силикати fi:Silikaatti (yhdiste) uk:Силікати zh:矽酸鹽
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