Monazite is a primarily reddish-brown phosphate mineral that contains rare-earth elements. Due to variability in composition, monazite is considered a group of minerals. Monazite group on Mindat.org The most common species of the group is monazite-(Ce), that is, the cerium-dominant member of the group. Monazite-(Ce) on Mindat.org It occurs usually in small isolated . It has a hardness of 5.0 to 5.5 on the Mohs scale of mineral hardness and is relatively Density, about 4.6 to 5.7 g/cm3. There are five different most common species of monazite, depending on the relative amounts of the rare earth elements in the mineral: Monazite group on Mindat.org
The elements in parentheses are listed in the order of their relative proportion within the mineral: lanthanum is the most common rare-earth element in monazite-(La), and so forth. Silica () is present in trace amounts, as well as small amounts of uranium and thorium. Due to the alpha decay of thorium and uranium, monazite contains a significant amount of helium, which can be extracted by heating. "Helium From Sand", March 1931, Popular Mechanics p. 460.
The following analyses are of monazite from: (I.) Burke County, North Carolina, US; (II.) Arendal, Norway; (III.) Emmaville, New South Wales, Australia.
III. |
25.09 |
36.64 |
30.21 |
— |
1.23 |
3.21 |
3.11 |
— |
— |
— |
99.49 |
5.001 |
Monazite is an important ore for thorium,Wolfgang Stoll "Thorium and Thorium Compounds" Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry 2012 Wiley-VCH, Weinheim. . lanthanum, and cerium.McGill, Ian (2005) "Rare Earth Elements" in Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim. . It is often found in . India, Madagascar, and South Africa have large deposits of monazite sands. The deposits in India are particularly rich in monazite.
Monazite is radioactive due to the presence of thorium and, less commonly, uranium. The radiogenic decay of uranium and thorium to lead enables monazite to be dated through monazite geochronology. Monazite crystals often have multiple distinct zones that formed through successive geologic events that lead to monazite crystallization. These domains can be dated to gain insight into the geologic history of its host rocks.
The name monazite comes from the (to be solitary), via German Monazit, in allusion to its isolated crystals. Oxford English Dictionary, 3rd edition, 2002.
Monazite sand was also briefly mined in North Carolina, United States, but, shortly thereafter, extensive deposits in southern India were found. Brazilian and Indian monazite dominated the industry before World War II.Mertie, John B. (1953). " Monazite Deposits of the Southeastern Atlantic States." United States Geological Survey, 6 After World War II, monazite mining shifted to South Africa.
It was in monazite that the discovery of the first radium-bearing ore was identified in Australia in 1904 by T. H. Laby and Douglas Mawson,Cooper, B. J. (2009). " Bragg, Mawson and Brown, and the Early Uranium Discoveries in South Australia." Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia, 133(2), 199–218. (Abstract available; full article may be purchased.) who analysed samples of monazite collected from the Pilbara in Western Australia. The samples were tested in the University of Sydney engineering laboratory. Edgeworth David made the formal presentation of their paper describing their findings to the Royal Society of New South Wales on 5 October 1904.Mawson, Douglas; and Laby, Thomas, "Preliminary observations on radio-activity and the occurrence of radium in Australian minerals", Journal and Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales, 38 (1904), 382-9Pring, Allan, and Brugger, Joël, "Mawson and the Radium and Uranium Mineralisation at Mount Painter, Northern Flinders Ranges, South Australia", Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy Bulletin, 6 (2013), 86-9.Urwin, Jessica, " The radioactive Dr Mawson: Douglas Mawson and the quest for Australia's radium riches, 1904-58", Australian Historical Studies, 53 (1) (2022), 26-42. . There are large monazite deposits in Australia.
Monazite was the only significant source of commercial lanthanides, but because of concern over the disposal of the Decay product of thorium, bastnäsite came to displace monazite in the production of lanthanides in the 1960s due to its much lower thorium content. Increased interest in thorium for nuclear energy may bring monazite back into commercial use.
Monazite sand deposits are prevalently of the monazite-(cerium) composition. Typically, the lanthanides in such monazites contain about 45–48% cerium, about 24% lanthanum, about 17% neodymium, about 5% praseodymium, and minor quantities of samarium, gadolinium, and yttrium. Europium concentrations tend to be low, about 0.05%. South African "rock" monazite, from Steenkampskraal, was processed in the 1950s and early 1960s by the Lindsay Chemical Division of American Potash and Chemical Corporation, at the time the largest producer of lanthanides in the world. Steenkampskraal monazite provided a supply of the complete set of lanthanides. Very low concentrations of the heaviest lanthanides in monazite justified the term "rare" earth for these elements, with prices to match. Thorium content of monazite is variable and sometimes can be up to 20–30%. Monazite from certain or from Bolivian tin ore veins is essentially thorium-free. However, commercial monazite sands typically contain between 6 and 12% thorium oxide.
The final products yielded for this process are thorium-phosphate concentrate, RE hydroxides, and uranium concentrate. Depending on the relative market prices of uranium, thorium, and rare earth elements as well as the availability of customers and the logistics of delivering to them, some or all of those products may be economical to sell or further process into a marketable form, while others constitute tailings for disposal. Products of the uranium and thorium decay series, particularly radium will be present in trace amounts and form a radiotoxic hazard. While radium-228 (a product of thorium decay) will be present only in extremely minute amounts (less than one milligram per metric ton of thorium), and will decay away with a half-life of roughly 5.75 years, radium-226 will be present at a ratio above 300 milligrams per metric ton of uranium and due to its long half-life (~1600 years) will essentially remain with the residue. As radium forms the least soluble alkaline earth metal sulfate known, radium sulfate will be present among the solid filtration products after sulfuric acid has been added.
One study done at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee the performance of synthetic monazite to borosilicate glass in radioactive waste management is compared. This experiment involved synthetic monazite and borosilicate glass being soaked in a contaminated simulated Savannah River defense wastes for 28 days, during the time period the leaching rates from both materials were measured. The results show that the synthetic monazite is a far more effective material for containing radioactive waste due to its low leaching rates and slow corrosion rate.
In a second study natural monazite is found to have an enhanced ability to deal with radiation byproducts due the property of radiation "resistance" as it is able to remain crystalline after being subjected to high amounts of alpha-decay radiation and becoming amorphized. Due to this high durability, it is seen as a better alternative for hosting materials such as radioactive strontium than other tested minerals. Synthetic monazite is also shown to have similar durability to that of the natural crystalline samples after it becomes fully amorphized.
Mineralization and extraction
Acid cracking
Alkaline cracking
Extraction of rare-earth metals from monazite ore
Containing nuclear waste
Further reading
External links
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