Spodumene is a pyroxene mineral consisting of lithium aluminium inosilicate, lithiumaluminum(siliconoxygen3)2, and is a commercially important source of lithium. It occurs as colorless to yellowish, purplish, or lilac kunzite (see below), or alternatively yellowish-green or emerald-green hiddenite; it takes the form of prismatic crystals, often of great size. Single crystals of in size are reported from the Black Hills of South Dakota, United States.Robert Louis Bonewitz, 2005, Rock and Gem, London, Dorling Kindersley
The naturally occurring low-temperature form α-spodumene is in the monoclinic system, and the high-temperature β-spodumene crystallizes in the tetragonal system. α-Spodumene converts to β-spodumene at temperatures above 900 °C. Typically crystals are heavily striated along the principal axis. Crystal faces are often etched and pitted with triangular markings.
Spodumene occurs in lithium-rich granite and . Associated minerals include quartz, albite, petalite, eucryptite, lepidolite, and beryl.
Transparent material has long been used as a gemstone with varieties kunzite and hiddenite noted for their strong pleochroism. Source localities include the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Afghanistan, Australia, Brazil, Madagascar (see mining), Pakistan, Québec in Canada, and North Carolina and California in the U.S.
Since 2018, the DRC has been known to have the largest lithium spodumene hard-rock deposit in the world, with mining operations occurring in the central DRC territory of Manono, Tanganyika Province. As of 2021, the company AVZ Minerals is developing the Manono Lithium and Tin project, and has a resource size of 400 million tonnes of high-grade low-impurity ore at 1.65% lithium oxide (Lithium2Oxygen) spodumene hard-rock based on studies and drilling of Roche Dure, one of several pegmatites in the deposit.
In 2016, the price of spodumene concentrate was forecast to be $500–600/ton for years to come. However, price spiked above $800 in January 2018, and production increased more than consumption, resulting in the price declining to $400 by September 2020.
World production of lithium via spodumene was around 80,000 metric tonnes per annum in 2018, primarily from the Greenbushes mine pegmatite of Western Australia and from some China and sources. The Talison Minerals mine in Greenbushes, Western Australia (involving Tianqi Lithium, Albemarle Corporation, and Global Advanced Metals), is reported to be the world's second-largest and to have the highest grade of ore at 2.4% Li2O (2012 figures).
In 2020, Australia expanded spodumene mining to become the leading lithium-producing country in the world.
An important economic concentrate of spodumene, known as spodumene concentrate 6 or SC6, is a high-purity lithium ore with around 6% lithium content being produced as a raw material for the subsequent production of lithium-ion batteries for electric vehicles. Piedmont Lithium Signs Sales Agreement with Tesla , 28 September 2020, retrieved 14 March 2021.
Traditional lithium refining in the 2010s involves acid leaching of lithium-containing ores, precipitation of impurities, concentration of the lithium solution, and then conversion to lithium carbonate or lithium hydroxide. These refining methods result in significant quantities of caustic waste effluent and tailings, which are usually either highly acidic or alkali. Suitable extraction reagents include alkali metal sulfates, such as sodium sulfate, sodium carbonate, chlorine, or hydrofluoric acid.
Another processing method relies on Pyrometallurgy of SC6—roasting at high temperatures exceeding to convert the spodumene from the tightly bound alpha structure to a more open beta structure from which the lithium is more easily extracted—then cooling and reacting with various in a sequence of Hydrometallurgy processing steps. Some offer the use of noncaustic reagents and result in reduced waste streams, potentially allowing the use of a closed-loop refining process. Tesla has developed and, as of 2025, is operationalizing at scale, this process of lithium refinement that does not require strong acids to extract lithium from spodumene. Their method mixes sodium chloride with the open-beta-structure spodumene concentrate and water. Agitation at high temperatures produces a slurry rich in lithium that can be filtered and purified into lithium hydroxide. The sands and limestone waste products can be repurposed as construction materials. A $375 million Tesla refinery plant located on 1,200 acres in Robstown, Texas, is under construction using this process. It began partial operation in December 2024. The site was chosen for its proximity to the Port of Corpus Christi, where spodumene can easily be imported.
A common form of more highly refined lithium from both of the above processes is lithium hydroxide, commonly used as an input in the battery industry to manufacture lithium-ion (Li-ion) battery cathode material.
This emerald-green variety of spodumene is colored by chromium, just as for . Some green spodumene is colored with substances other than chromium; such stones tend to have a lighter color; they are not true hiddenite.
Kunzite was discovered in 1902, and was named after George Frederick Kunz, Tiffany & Co's chief jeweler at the time, and a noted mineralogist. It has been found in Brazil, the U.S., Canada, CIS, Mexico, Sweden, Western Australia, Afghanistan, and Pakistan.
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