Following a discussion on "PaulAhlstedt - YahooGroup" I have compiled this overview on "Faceting Sphalerite" with the comments by Paul Ahlstedt and me. You can se the entire thread here.
This is a summary of what you can find on Sphalerite in most mineral text books. |
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Chemistry | Sphalerite
is a naturally occuring mineral made up of Zinc Sulphide.
In nature there's invariably some amount of iron in the
crystal, but also barium. Sphalerite is one of the base
ores of mining. As a curiosum, Sphalerite with germanium is one of the main sources for this metal. |
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Hardness | Hardness is given as 3˝ to 4. | |
Density | Density is between 3.9 and 4.2 with the average of 4.05. The higher the iron-content the higher density. | |
Refractive Index (RI) | Refractive
Index 2.36 is almost as high as Diamond. Sphalerite's
Dispersion though is extreme, 4 times as high as Diamond,
at 0.16 Since Sphalerite is isometric, theres no birefringence. Anormal birefringence is rarely seen. |
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Crystallography | Sphalerite
crystallizes in the cubic system. The most common form
beeing the rhombic dodecahedron. Sphalerite has 6 very distinct cleavages parallel to the faces of the dodecahedron. Sphalerite is renowned for multiple complex twinning with crystals often showing penetration twins. |
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Color | Yellow,
brown, red and black is common. Darkbrown to black is the
normal. Green is rarely found. With higher iron content the color tends to the darker grayish brown and black. Barium gives a very nice yellow to red Sphalerite, at least with low iron. |
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Special | Sphalerite
is triboluminescent - it gives off light when cut or
crushed. Sphalerite with higher iron contents stinks when cut or crushed. The wellknown odour of rotten egg can be quite overwhelming. The same smell is a telltale in identifying Sphalerite, when you put a small drop of hydrochloric acid on the specimen. At least Iron-Sphalerites gives off hydrogen sulphide with it's characteristic smell. |
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Inclusions | Commonly included. Minerals like Pyrite, Chalcopyrite, Galena and even Silver are found. | |
Synthesis | Sphalerite has been made synthetic to study it's semiconducting abilities. Pure Zinc Sulphide is white, and synthetic Sphalerites are to. |
Sphalerite to me has 4 - 5 factors giving concern in faceting.
If you really want to cut a Sphalerite, the
softness is a technical problem, not a great concern.
The color is as your rough gives it.
The smell when cutting is - well - as it is. You either stand up
to it, or leave it alone.
This leaves us with the cleavages - and the twinning - as the main factor. Let's look at the rhombic dodecahedron a litle more.
At JCrystals they've made a Java-applet of
a dodecahedron that's
good to play with.
You may also build your own in
paper or cardboard.
When you play around with the dodecahedron model it's important
to realise the basic orientations of the 2-, 3- and 4-fold axis
of the cubic system.
Rhombic Dodecahedron |
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1: The 2-fold axis | 2: The 3-fold axis | 3: The 4-fold axis | 4: My preferred orientation | 5: My second orientation |
If you have a model in hand, Orient it in these 3 basic orientations, Remember the faces on the dodecahedron represents the cleavage and Think "Orienting it for faceting".
Now! How
shall we find the cleavages? What we are looking for are
the mirrorlike reflections from minute cleavages on the
edges or rough surfaces of our stone. Anyone familiar
with waterworn pebles of Topaz or cabochon cutting of
Star Ruby will know the looks. When turning the stones,
you will notice the reflections from the different
cleavage planes. Mark them on your rough, and you should
be able to find the 4-fold axis - 4 cleavages like in
picture 3 above. When first you have located it, it's no
matter to tilt it the right way, and mark the table. Then grind the table, dop up, and you are ready to facet. |
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Photographing
cleavages are rather dificult. You have to capture the
reflection in the correct angle to show off the silky
sheen so characteristic of rolled Topaz pebbles. On
studying the Topaz pebble up close you may see the small
cleavages as lines and minute mirrors in the surface of
the pebble. The Topaz above is oriented almost vertical,
so you are looking directly on to the clevage plane Partings are coarser since the phenomena is ascribed to muiltiple twinning, hence not as dominant and penetrating as cleavage but much more brittle. |
TwinningWith the twinning the problems with the cleavages multiplies. In one half of the twin the cleavage is oriented away from your cutting, in the other half it's almost inevitable that it's against. If your crystal is twinned, you may have to compromise on some facets. Maybe trade off polishing parts or all of a few facets. If you are lucky you find a direction to cut this specific facet, that polishes both halves of the twin. This is really time to play with reversing lap rotation and placing the gem on the lap. Keep a detailed log of your progress, or you will spoil the work done in prepolish polishing. |
I guess the real or most challenging problem with Sphalerite is really the scratching issue - that is where that gem will make a faceter out of you. It will often scratch, or get little tiny fragments break off a facet edge and skate across your work and.... well, you know what happens then.
Faceting should be on the wary side. Use as fine a mesh as possible - #600 or even less for cutting, a lot of water and not to high speed. On the other hand I did not find it difficult to cut Sphalerite - Calcite is worse. I polished on acrylic with diamond - #50.000.
Oh, and pay particular attention to - use SLOW lap speeds at all times. This IS NOT a material that can handle higher lap speeds.
This is one of those gems where you would
wish you had learned yourself how to keep a log. I kept track of
facets near on cleavages, to be aware next time I came around.
And thats necessary since you will go over each facet at least 2
times, and all the good work in cutting and prepolishing can be
spoiled trying to polish for a fraction of a moment in the wrong
direction to the grain of your gem.
But start off your log before that. Try to log down how you oriented the gem and which thoughts you had, doing that. Dopping method etc.
Log lap type, lap speed, where you put down the stone on the lap, if you cut it with reversed rotation, if you used more or less pressure, small strokes or long sweeps. Anything that might help you next time you go over that same facet.
And maybe the most valuable use of this log is for next time you cut a Sphalerite. This sounds maybe elaborate, and you soon cuts down on detail cutting the ordinary gems like quartz, but on these trouble makers like Sphalerite, Calcite, Spodumene, Zincite or Cuprite - the more details the better.
You really shouldn't get Sphalerite hot during any stage of faceting, primarily this means NO wax dopping. Go with epoxy or cyanoacrylate, but remember that epoxy will shrink 5% or more, so keep the bond line as thin (and small) as possible - if you do not, you will exert considerable mechanical stress on the gem and possibly cleave it.
However, this are just warning notes as Sphalerite is a material like Fluorite where the cleavage is not as bad as would be thought (or bad as it is reported in other sources) - and most of you know that fluorite is really not that much of a bummer in terms of cleavage - feldspar is another, etc., but I am just saying best to be careful rather than sorry.
The greatest bit of wizardry is in choosing the correct lap - you should use the finest lap that you can to get the job done - start with #600, and get finer if you can. Paul Ahlstedt has often just cut Sphalerite with a #3,000 and let it be with it. Problem is, like Calcite, Sphalerite will give a sort of "suction" type of feel on the lap the finer the lap gets - and that will most often pull cleavage fragments out of the surface of the facet you are cutting if you are not careful.
For this reason, use light pressure, and using the mindset behind the cleavage models, always try to cut in a direction which compresses the cleavage planes - use your motor reverse switch heavily here for that. This may especially be very difficult to achieve on the table.
Paul Ahlstedt states that he has the best
luck with lots of water on a Raytech NuBond in #3,000 for all
grinding. In essence, you do the grinding and prepolishing all
with one grit. This has the advantage that the lap is so fine and
gentle, it really greatly minimizes the tendency to scratch and
so on.
My #3000 NuBond imparts what I would say is about a #8000 finish,
so it is actually pretty near a polish to begin with - subsequent
polishing is then fairly easy.
I used #600 for roughing in, and #3000 on acrylic for prepolish.
The one problem here is that you can only use this method on normal jewelry sized stones - if you have one of those 100+ carat whoppers, you definately will have to default to the #600 for rough grinding.
When you go to polishing - I guess the overall trick is to use light pressure, as fine laps as possible for the application, and very slow lap speed with lots of water - and the polishing method should produce as little friction as possible.
Use your favorite method with high
lubricity, such as diamond or alox with extender fluid, light
oil, etc, as this material will easily scratch and abrade with
the slightest friction.
This is one gem you shouldn't use water & Linde slurry on,
although you can if you are gentle with it (use a heavy slurry).
Paul recommend using the finest diamond that you can get away with, or you could even use alox powder b with a lubricant other than water and that would be fine as well - the issue here is that the more "glossy" you get the surface, the more that material kicks butt. :-)
Note however that the longer you stay on a Sphalerite facet polishing it, the more it will round - so get it as fine as you can with your prepolish and then hit it as quickly as possible to bring a good polish up and then move on to the next facet. The best polishing laps are those that are gentle. Plastic, and something like a resin Pol-A-Gem, Corian, Ultra-lap (and more traditionally a wax) should all probably be good gentle laps to use for polishing.
Also note that because of the softness, you can still OVERCUT while you are polishing - so pay careful attention that you keep your meets.
A final note might be that sulfur and sulfur compounds are NOT good for your faceting machine, so be sure to clean up religiously after you are done.
A gem of some 10mm in diameter or greater in a lighter body color is worth the trouble, and a great addition to a collection - as well as being a great learning tool.
As for the design try
"Sphaler-8"
on the USFG website. It's designed especially for
Sphalerite. But SRB's will also do well. I have used a
step cut which displayed the caramel brown of my rough
very well. Your choice of design should go for simpler designs to avoid facets closing in on the cleavages. |
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On the other hand the
high RI gives you more room for playing with the pavillon
angles. Thus darker material may safely be shallower, and
still show reflectance. The dark color masks the
dispersion, hence that's no concern. In very light material you might wish for a cut that displays the dispersion. Go for a higher crown, or even a BOG-optimisation of the design. But to get full advantage of the dispersion, make sure your facets are flat. |
Aarhus, Denmark - October 27. 2005, Jón Olaf Svane with the aid and gross contributions by Paul Ahlstedt.