The mineral muscovite has heat-resistant properties that make it popular in electronics manufacturing.
Muscovite is a valuable industrial mineral found in major deposits in Asia and South America. Russians first used muscovite in window glass, due to the mineral's transparency and ability to be worked into thin sheets. Today, manufacturers mostly use heat-resistant muscovite as an insulating substance in electrical products. Muscovite also serves as fireproofing and as a lubricant in oils. Ground muscovite can even be seen in wallpaper and makeup, to add shine and glitter.
Color, Streak and Luster
Muscovite isn't known for its beauty, but it does come in a variety of colors, including shades of silver, yellow, brown, green and red. Most commonly, muscovite has no color, or is clear. Even in its colored forms, muscovite's streaking patterns are usually white. Luster classifies how light bounces off of a mineral's surface. Muscovite is known for a luster ranging from vitreous, or glass-like, to pearly.
Diaphaneity
This physical trait assesses a mineral's transparency. Muscovite's diaphaneity ranges from transparent to translucent. Some specimens are transparent, which means light can enter and exit the mineral's substance unimpeded. Other samples are translucent, allowing some light to enter, but in a weakened or distorted fashion.
Cleavage
Cleavage measures how well a mineral divides or breaks apart. The five classes of this trait range from no cleavage to perfect cleavage. Muscovite possesses perfect cleavage qualities, so it splits without any rough surfaces, and has only smooth planes where it is broken. This cleavage quality comes from muscovite's structure, which includes aluminum silicate layers interspersed with bonding layers of potassium ions. Muscovite is a relatively strong mineral, considering its strong cleavage properties.
Hardness
The Mohs hardness scale gauges how easily a smooth surface can be scratched or abraded. The scale ranges from zero for liquids up to 10 for diamonds. Muscovite has a Mohs hardness ranking ranging from 2.5 to 3, which means its surface can be scratched by a fingernail or by the soft mineral, calcite. This softer property makes muscovite an industrially malleable substance, suited for shaping in and around small electrical wires on circuit boards and in other electrical components.
Specific Gravity
This measurement pinpoints a mineral specimen's density relative to its weight and size. Specific gravity compares a mineral's weight to water. Water's specific gravity is 1.0. Muscovite's specific gravity is 2.8 to 2.9, which means it's 2.8 to 2.9 times heavier than water. Minerals with specific gravity ranging from 2 to 4.5 are considered average in density.
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