n.
A white, brownish, or reddish mineral, KMgCl3·6H2O, an ore of potassium, used to manufacture potash salts.
[After Rudolf von Carnall (1804-1874), German mining engineer.]
Dictionary:
car·nall·ite (kär'nə-līt')
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[After Rudolf von Carnall (1804-1874), German mining engineer.]
| 5min Related Video: carnallite |
| Chemistry Dictionary: carnallite |
A mineral consisting of a hydrated mixed chloride of potassium and magnesium, KCl.MgCl2.6H2O.
| WordNet: carnallite |
The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
a white or reddish mineral consisting of hydrous chlorides of potassium and magnesium; used as a fertilizer and as a source of potassium and magnesium
| Wikipedia: Carnallite |
Carnallite is an evaporite mineral, a hydrated potassium magnesium chloride with formula: KMgCl3·6(H2O). It is variably colored yellow to white, reddish, and sometimes colorless or blue. It is usually massive to fibrous with rare pseudohexagonal orthorhombic crystals. It is transparent to translucent with a greasy luster. The refractive indices are nα=1.467 nβ=1.476 nγ=1.494. It has a Mohs hardness of 2.5 and a
Carnallite occurs with a sequence of potassium and magnesium evaporite minerals sylvite, kainite, picromerite, polyhalite and kieserite. Carnallite is a somewhat rare double chloride mineral which only forms under a specific environmental conditions in an evaporating sea or sedimentary basin. It is mined for both potassium and magnesium and occurs in the evaporite deposits of Carlsbad, New Mexico; the Paradox Basin in Colorado and Utah; Stassfurt, Germany; the Perm Basin, Russia; and the Williston Basin in Saskatchewan, Canada. These deposits date from the Devonian through the Permian Periods. In contrast, both Israel and Jordan produce potash from the Dead Sea by using evaporation pans to further concentrate the brine until carnallite precipitates, dredging the carnallite from the pans, and processing to remove the magnesium chloride from the potassium chloride.
Carnallite was first described in 1856 from its type location of Stassfurt Deposit, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. It was named for the Prussian mining engineer, Rudolf von Carnall (1804-1874).
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| potassium chloride | |
| magnesium chloride | |
| caesium |
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