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Nickeline or niccolite is the form of . The naturally occurring mineral contains roughly 43.9% and 56.1% by mass, but composition of the mineral may vary slightly.

Small quantities of , and are usually present, and sometimes the arsenic is largely replaced by . This last forms an isomorphous series with (nickel antimonide).


Etymology and history
Medieval miners looking for copper in the German would sometimes find a red mineral, superficially resembling copper ore. Upon attempting extraction, no copper was produced, and subsequently, the miners would be afflicted with mysterious illness. They blamed a mischievous sprite of German mythology, Nickel (similar to Old Nick) for besetting the copper (German: Kupfer). Chambers Twentieth Century Dictionary, p888, W&R Chambers Ltd, 1977. This German equivalent of "copper-nickel" was used as early as 1694 (other old German synonyms are Rotnickelkies and Arsennickel).

In 1751, Baron Axel Fredrik Cronstedt was attempting to extract copper from kupfernickel mineral, and obtained instead a white metal which he named "nickel", after the sprite. In modern German, Kupfernickel and Kupfer-Nickel designates the alloy .

The names subsequently given to the ore, nickeline from F. S. Beudant, 1832, and niccolite, from J. D. Dana, 1868, refer to the presence of ; in Latin, niccolum.

In 1971, the International Mineralogical Association recommended use of the name nickeline rather than niccolite.


Occurrence
Nickeline is formed by hydrothermal modification of ultramafic rocks and associated ore deposits, and may be formed by replacement of nickel-copper bearing sulfides (replacing , and in association with copper arsenic sulfides), or via of sulfide-free ultramafic rocks, where metasomatic fluids introduce sulfur, carbonate, and arsenic. This typically results in mineral assemblages including , and metamorphic - via sulfidation and associated arsenopyrite-nickeline-breithauptite.

Associated minerals include: , , , , , , , and . Nickeline alters to (a coating of green nickel arsenate) on exposure to moist air.

Most of these minerals can be found in the areas surrounding and Cobalt, . Other localities include the eastern flank of the Widgiemooltha Dome, Western Australia, from altered pentlndite-pyrite-pyrrhotite assemblages within the Mariners, Redross and Miitel nickel mines where nickeline is produced by regional Au-As-Ag-bearing alteration and carbonate metasomatism. Other occurrences include within similarly modified nickel mines of the Kambalda area.


Crystal structure
The unit cell of nickeline is used as the prototype of a group of crystalline solids with similar crystal structures. The Mineral Nickeline". Retrieved 20 May 2022. The structure consists of two interpenetrating sublattices: a primitive hexagonal nickel sublattice and a hexagonal close-packed arsenic sublattice. Each nickel atom is octahedrally coordinated to six arsenic atoms, while each arsenic atom is trigonal prismatically coordinated to six nickel atoms.Inorganic Chemistry by Duward Shriver and Peter Atkins, 3rd Edition, W.H. Freeman and Company, 1999, pp.47,48. Compounds adopting the NiAs structure are generally the , , and of .

The following are the members of the nickeline group:


Economic importance
Nickeline is rarely used as a source of nickel due to the presence of arsenic, which is deleterious to most and milling techniques. When nickel sulfide ore deposits have been altered to produce nickeline, often the presence of arsenic renders the ore uneconomic when concentrations of As reach several hundred parts per million. However, arsenic bearing nickel ore may be treated by blending with 'clean' ore sources, to produce a blended feedstock which the mill and smelter can handle with acceptable recovery.

The primary problem for treating nickeline in conventionally constructed nickel mills is the specific gravity of nickeline versus that of pentlandite. This renders the ore difficult to treat via the froth flotation technique. Within the smelter itself, the nickeline contributes to high arsenic contents which require additional reagents and fluxes to strip from the nickel metal.

  • Dana's Manual of Mineralogy

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