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Kieserite

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Kieserite
General
CategorySulfate minerals
FormulaMgSO4·H2O
IMA symbolKsr[1]
Strunz classification7.CB.05
Dana classification29.6.2.1
Crystal systemMonoclinic
Crystal classPrismatic (2/m)
(same H-M symbol)
Space groupC2/c
Unit cella = 7.51 Å, b = 7.61 Å
c = 6.92 Å; β = 116.17°; Z = 4
Identification
ColorColorless, grayish-white or yellowish
Crystal habitMassive, granular; rarely as pyramidal crystals
TwinningContact on {001}, polysynthetic about [110]
Cleavage{110} and {111} perfect
FractureUneven
TenacityFragile
Mohs scale hardness3.5
LusterVitreous to dull
StreakWhite
DiaphaneityTransparent to translucent
Specific gravity2.57
Optical propertiesBiaxial (+)
Refractive indexnα = 1.520 nβ = 1.533 nγ = 1.584
Birefringenceδ = 0.064
2V angle55°
Dispersionr > v, moderate
SolubilityIn water
References[2][3][4]

Kieserite, or magnesium sulfate monohydrate, is a hydrous magnesium sulfate mineral with formula (MgSO4·H2O).

It has a vitreous luster and it is colorless, grayish-white or yellowish. Its hardness is 3.5 and crystallizes in the monoclinic crystal system. Gunningite is the zinc member of the kieserite group of minerals.[5]

Etymology

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It is named after Dietrich Georg von Kieser (Jena, Germany 1862).

Occurrence

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Kieserite commonly occurs in marine evaporites and rarely in volcanic environments as a sublimate. It occurs in association with halite, carnallite, polyhalite, anhydrite, boracite, sulfoborite, leonite, epsomite and celestine.[4]

Mars

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In early 2005, Mars Express, a European Space Agency orbiter, discovered evidence of kieserite in patches of Valles Marineris (the largest canyon on Mars), along with gypsum and polyhydrated sulfates. This is direct evidence of Mars's watery past and augments similar discoveries made by the Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity in 2004.

Moons of Jupiter

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Kieserite might also be a rock-forming mineral in the icy mantle of the outer three Galilean moons (Europa, Ganymede, Callisto). At pressures higher than 2.7 GPa, kieserite transforms to a triclinic crystal structure.[6]

Uses

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It is used in the production of Epsom salt and as a fertilizer, the overall global annual usage in agriculture in the mid 1970s was 2.3 million tons.[7]

Crystal structure of kieserite

Kieserite is also used for cleaning hard water deposits from tiles, stones, and other pool and fountain lining materials. Due to its hardness, which is greater than hard water deposits but less than tiles and other water feature linings, it is blasted at the hard water deposits to remove them.

When used as a fertilizer, response to kieserite is likely where:

  • Soil Mg levels are low
  • pH is high
  • Intensive liming occurs to raise the pH
  • Nitrogen is applied as ammonium, as this can lead to an antagonism between ammonium and magnesium
  • Compacted soils exist
  • There is a period of wet/cold weather
  • Dry weather occurs, leading to low magnesium mobility in the soil profile.[8]

See also

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References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Kieserite is a naturally occurring mineral with the chemical formula MgSO₄·H₂O, representing magnesium sulfate monohydrate.[1] It crystallizes in the monoclinic system, typically forming colorless to grayish-white, vitreous crystals or masses that are translucent and fragile.[1] With a Mohs hardness of 3½ and a specific gravity of 2.571, kieserite exhibits perfect cleavage on {110} and {111} planes.[1] Named after the German physician Dietrich Georg Kieser (1779–1862), kieserite was first described in 1861 by Eduard Reichardt from specimens found in the Stassfurt salt deposits. It is a key component of marine evaporite formations worldwide.[1] It commonly occurs intergrown with halite or associated with other potassium salts like carnallite, and is rarely found as volcanic sublimates or efflorescences.[1] Notable localities include Stassfurt, Germany; Ozinki, Russia; and various Permian evaporite basins.[1] In agriculture, kieserite serves as a vital fertilizer source for both magnesium and sulfur, containing approximately 15% Mg (or 25% MgO) and 21% S (or 50% SO₃).[2] Its high solubility makes it fast-acting, ideal for correcting magnesium deficiencies in crops such as sugar beets, peas, beans, and horticultural plants, particularly in high-pH or intensively limed soils.[3] Applied granularly to soil during the growing season, it releases nutrients over 4–6 weeks without suitability for fertigation or foliar use, and is approved for organic farming.[2]

Nomenclature and history

Etymology

The name kieserite derives from the German physician and naturalist Dietrich Georg von Kieser (1779–1862), professor at the University of Jena, in whose honor the mineral was named following its initial description.[1][4] The suffix "-ite," commonly appended to mineral names in the 19th century to denote a distinct species, reflects the era's convention of honoring prominent scientists and scholars in fields like medicine and natural history through eponymy.[5] German chemist Eduard Reichardt first described and named kieserite in 1861 from specimens collected at the Stassfurt salt deposits in Germany, recognizing it as a distinct hydrous magnesium sulfate mineral akin to epsom salt but with a single water molecule.[6][7] This naming occurred shortly before Kieser's death, underscoring his influence in studying natural substances with potential therapeutic applications.

Discovery and early studies

Kieserite was first described in 1861 from samples collected in the evaporite deposits of Stassfurt, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany, by German chemist Eduard Reichardt, who identified it as a distinct mineral species amid the complex salt formations.[8] Early investigations linked the mineral to magnesium sulfate hydrates, noting its occurrence in association with other evaporitic salts like carnallite and halite in the Stassfurt strata.[1] Its status was later confirmed through a special procedure by the International Mineralogical Association (IMA) in 1967. In the 19th century, European mineralogists conducted initial analyses that confirmed kieserite's monohydrate composition through rudimentary chemical assays, including precipitation tests for magnesium and sulfate ions, as well as comparative solubility studies in water, which revealed its relative stability compared to more hydrated sulfates.[9] These efforts, building on Reichardt's observations, established kieserite as a key monohydrate variant in the magnesium sulfate series, distinct from looser hydrates.[8] Kieserite held historical significance in the nascent industrial mining at Stassfurt, where potash extraction began in 1861; it was differentiated from other sulfates, such as mirabilite, by its lower water solubility and integration into "hard salt" layers alongside kainite, facilitating early separation processes for fertilizer production. The mineral's identification supported the rapid expansion of the Stassfurt industry, which by the 1870s processed vast quantities of mixed evaporites for agricultural and chemical applications.[10]

Properties

Physical properties

Kieserite typically appears as colorless, pale gray, or pale yellow crystals or masses, appearing colorless in transmitted light, with a vitreous luster and translucent diaphaneity.[9] It possesses a Mohs hardness of 3.5, rendering it relatively soft and susceptible to scratching by common materials like a copper penny.[9] The specific gravity is 2.571 g/cm³ (both measured and calculated), reflecting its moderate density among sulfate minerals.[9] The mineral exhibits perfect cleavage on the {110} and {111} planes, along with imperfect cleavage on {101} and {011}, which contributes to its distinctive breakage patterns.[9][4] Its fracture is uneven, and tenacity is described as fragile to friable, meaning it breaks irregularly and can crumble easily under pressure.[1][9] Kieserite rarely forms well-developed crystals, which are dipyramidal with forms like {111}, {110}, and {011}, reaching up to 10 cm in size; more commonly, it occurs in massive or granular aggregates, ranging from coarse- to fine-grained textures.[9] It is soluble in water, although dissolution is slow, a property that distinguishes its behavior in aqueous environments.[9]

Chemical properties

Kieserite is the mineral form of magnesium sulfate monohydrate, with the chemical formula MgSO₄·H₂O.[11] This compound consists of magnesium, sulfur, oxygen, and a single water molecule of hydration, making it a hydrated salt that serves as a source of essential ions in aqueous environments.[12] The molecular weight of kieserite is 138.38 g/mol.[11] It exhibits high solubility in water, approximately 320 g/L at 20°C, during which it dissociates into Mg²⁺ cations and SO₄²⁻ anions, facilitating its use in ion-exchange and nutrient delivery processes.[13] In contrast, it is only slightly soluble in glycerol, limiting its reactivity in non-aqueous organic solvents.[14] Kieserite dehydrates to anhydrous magnesium sulfate (MgSO₄) upon heating above approximately 200–300°C.[15] Regarding safety, kieserite is generally non-toxic in standard forms, with an oral LD50 greater than 2,000 mg/kg in rats, though excessive application in agricultural settings can elevate soil salinity levels and affect environmental balance.[16][13]

Structure

Crystal structure

Kieserite adopts a monoclinic crystal structure belonging to the space group C2/c (No. 15). This arrangement forms a framework composed of polyhedral units linked together, characteristic of many hydrated sulfate minerals. The structure is defined by chains of edge-sharing octahedra centered on magnesium ions, cross-linked by isolated sulfate tetrahedra, with water molecules playing a key role in stabilization through hydrogen bonding.[9] The unit cell parameters for kieserite are a = 6.912(2) Å, b = 7.624(2) Å, c = 7.642(2) Å, β = 118.09(2)°, with four formula units (Z = 4) per cell. Within this lattice, the magnesium cation occupies a special position and is octahedrally coordinated by six oxygen atoms to form distorted MgO₆ octahedra: specifically, four oxygen atoms from sulfate groups and two from the coordinating water molecule, resulting in an average Mg–O bond length of approximately 2.08 Å. The sulfate anions adopt nearly regular tetrahedral geometry with average S–O bond lengths around 1.47 Å, where the tetrahedra share corners with adjacent MgO₆ octahedra to propagate infinite chains parallel to the c-axis.[9][17] These octahedral-tetrahedral chains are interconnected via additional corner-sharing and reinforced by hydrogen bonds from the water molecules (O–H···O) to oxygen atoms on the sulfate tetrahedra, with typical donor-acceptor distances of about 2.74 Å. This hydrogen-bonding network contributes to the overall cohesion of the framework, distinguishing kieserite from higher-hydrate sulfates. The calculated density based on this structural model is 2.571 g/cm³, consistent with measurements from well-crystallized samples.[17][9]

Polymorphism

Kieserite, or magnesium sulfate monohydrate (MgSO₄·H₂O), exists in a monoclinic crystal structure with space group C₂/c under ambient conditions.[18] Under high pressure, kieserite undergoes a second-order phase transition from this monoclinic α-phase to a triclinic β-phase with space group P̄1 at approximately 2.72 GPa and 295 K.[18] This transition is continuous and involves subtle distortions in the hydrogen-bonding network without dehydration.[18] A 2020 study on isothermal compression at 295 K determined the equation of state for both phases up to 8.3 GPa, revealing bulk moduli of 48.1 GPa for the α-phase and 49.3 GPa for the β-phase, indicating comparable compressibility and stability across the transition.[18] The β-phase remains stable at least to this pressure, with no further transitions observed in the investigated range.[18] These high-pressure polymorphs are relevant to the interiors of icy bodies in the outer solar system, where the α-phase may persist in the moderately pressurized mantles of satellites like Ganymede, while the β-phase could form in deeper regions of bodies like Callisto under pressures up to about 5 GPa.[18]

Occurrence and formation

Terrestrial occurrence

Kieserite is primarily found in marine evaporite deposits formed in ancient closed basins where seawater evaporation concentrated magnesium sulfate minerals.[19] These deposits are widespread in intracratonic basins, with significant occurrences in Permian and Devonian sequences.[19] Major deposits include the Zechstein evaporites of the Stassfurt potash salts in Germany, where kieserite forms part of the hartsalz layer interbedded with sylvite and anhydrite.[9] Similar formations occur in the Permian Basin of the United States, particularly in New Mexico and Utah, within the Ochoan evaporites of the Delaware and Salado formations.[19] In Canada, kieserite is present in the Devonian Elk Point Basin of Saskatchewan, associated with the Prairie Evaporite Formation.[19] Globally, substantial kieserite resources are distributed across Europe (e.g., Poland's Klodawa and Ukraine's Stebnyk deposits), North America, and Asia, including Russia's Solikamsk region and India's Salt Range in Punjab.[9][19] Kieserite commonly occurs in intergrowths with halite (NaCl), carnallite (KMgCl₃·6H₂O), anhydrite (CaSO₄), polyhalite, and sylvite, reflecting sequential precipitation in evaporative sequences.[19][9] It is rarely encountered in volcanic sublimates or as efflorescences on altered surfaces.[9] In modern operations, kieserite is extracted from these evaporite deposits primarily through underground mining in potash facilities, with solution mining applied in select potash-bearing sequences where soluble salts are dissolved selectively.[19]

Extraterrestrial occurrence

Kieserite, or magnesium sulfate monohydrate (MgSO₄·H₂O), was first identified on Mars in 2005 through infrared spectroscopy data from the Observatoire pour la Minéralogie, l'Eau, les Glaces et l'Activité (OMEGA) instrument aboard the European Space Agency's Mars Express orbiter. Spectral signatures matching kieserite were detected in layered outcrops within the Valles Marineris canyon system, particularly in Juventae Chasma and other wall exposures, alongside gypsum and polyhydrated sulfates. These findings indicate that kieserite formed in ancient aqueous environments, likely through evaporation of magnesium-rich brines during periods of wetter climatic conditions on early Mars, providing evidence for past habitable settings.[20] On the Jovian moons, kieserite is considered a likely component of the hydrated mineral assemblages in the icy surfaces and subsurface layers of Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto. Analysis of near-infrared spectra from the Galileo spacecraft's Near-Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (NIMS) revealed features consistent with hydrated magnesium sulfates, including the low-humidity polymorph of kieserite, which aligns with the cold, low-water environments of these satellites.[21] Laboratory studies of kieserite's spectral variability under simulated conditions of these moons confirm its stability as a potential rock-forming mineral in subsurface oceans or icy mantles, where high pressures may stabilize specific polymorphs like α-MgSO₄·H₂O on Europa and Ganymede, and both polymorphs on Callisto.[18] These detections suggest that kieserite could originate from upwelling of briny fluids from internal oceans, contributing to the non-ice materials observed on their surfaces.[22] Although direct confirmations are lacking, kieserite has been proposed as a trace component in hydrated sulfates within certain meteorites and cometary materials, reflecting broader processes of aqueous alteration in the early solar system. Such occurrences, if verified, would link kieserite to the distribution of water and sulfur-bearing compounds across primitive solar system bodies. Recent modeling efforts through 2025, informed by spectroscopic data, indicate that kieserite maintains stability in the desiccated Martian regolith under current low-temperature and low-humidity conditions, with minimal dehydration to anhydrous forms, supporting its long-term preservation since Noachian times.[23]

Formation processes

Kieserite primarily forms through the precipitation of magnesium sulfate from highly concentrated, magnesium-rich brines generated by the evaporation of seawater or hypersaline lake waters in arid environments. This process occurs when evaporation rates exceed water inflow, progressively concentrating dissolved ions until the brine reaches supersaturation with respect to kieserite (MgSO₄·H₂O), typically after the prior deposition of halite (NaCl) in the evaporite sequence. Such precipitation is favored in sulfate evaporite sequences, which develop under conditions of repeated marine incursions into restricted basins, allowing for the buildup of magnesium and sulfate ions in the residual brines.[24][25][26] The mineral's formation requires specific stability conditions, including low temperatures below 50°C and high salinity levels that maintain low water activity in the brine, preventing the crystallization of more hydrated magnesium sulfate phases like epsomite (MgSO₄·7H₂O). At these conditions, kieserite precipitates directly or via dehydration of higher hydrates during ongoing evaporation. However, upon exposure to arid surface environments with even lower humidity, kieserite can dehydrate to form hexahydrite (MgSO₄·6H₂O) or develop pseudomorphs where the original crystal structure is preserved but internally altered by water loss.[27][28][29] A rarer formation mechanism involves sublimation from volcanic vapors containing SO₂, H₂O, and magnesium species in fumaroles or volcanic gas emissions, where kieserite deposits as an efflorescence or sublimate under oxidizing, high-temperature conditions near the surface. This process is uncommon and typically results in small-scale occurrences compared to the dominant evaporitic settings.[9][30]

Uses

Agricultural applications

Kieserite serves as a vital fertilizer providing essential magnesium and sulfur nutrients to crops suffering from deficiencies, particularly in maize, horticultural produce, and broad-acre farming systems.[31][32][33] In agricultural practice, it is typically applied in granular form directly to the soil, offering slow water-solubility that ensures gradual nutrient release; application rates generally range from 100 to 500 kg/ha, adjusted according to soil test results to match crop needs.[34][35][36] This fertilizer enhances crop yields by alleviating magnesium deficiency symptoms like interveinal chlorosis in leaves, while also supporting soil structure through magnesium's role in clay particle flocculation and maintaining pH neutrality without acidifying the soil.[3][37][38] Mined kieserite has long been integral to fertilizer production, with global annual usage in agriculture totaling 2.3 million tons during the mid-1970s, and it continues to play a key role in sustainable farming practices as of 2025 amid growing demand for nutrient-specific amendments, with the global kieserite fertilizer market valued at approximately $1.2 billion in 2024.[39][40][41]

Industrial and other applications

Kieserite is processed into Epsom salt (magnesium sulfate heptahydrate, MgSO₄·7H₂O) by dissolving the mineral in water or hot water, followed by crystallization, centrifugation, drying, and sieving to yield the heptahydrate form.[42] This product is widely used in bath salts for therapeutic soaks, as a component in medical treatments such as saline laxatives and soaks for muscle injuries, and as a saline laxative.[42][43] In cleaning applications, kieserite serves as an effective agent for removing hard water deposits, such as calcium carbonate, from tiles, stones, pool linings, and boilers, through its use as a soft, water-soluble abrasive in blasting applications.[43][44] Beyond these, kieserite finds minor industrial roles as a magnesium supplement in animal feed to support nutritional needs, and in ceramics and textiles where it acts as a flux to lower melting points or as a mordant in dyeing processes.[45][46] Synthetic kieserite can be produced by crystallizing magnesium sulfate solutions under controlled conditions of temperature and humidity, often supplementing natural mining sources for consistent supply in industrial applications.[47]

References

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