Wairakite

Wairakite is a zeolite mineral with an analcime structure but containing a calcium ion. The chemical composition is Ca8(Al16Si32O96)*16H2O. It is named for the location of its discovery in North Island, New Zealand, by Alfred Steiner in 1955.[1][2] The mineral has since been found in metamorphic rocks and in geothermal areas. It was most likely first successfully synthesized in a laboratory in 1970.[3]

References

  1. Szostak, Rosemarie (1992), Handbook of molecular sieves, Springer, p. 482, ISBN 0-442-31899-5
  2. Steiner, Alfred (1955), "Wairakite, the calcium analogue of analcime, a new zeolite mineral", Mineralogy Magazine 30: 691–698, retrieved 2011-09-08
  3. Liou, J. G., "Synthesis and stability relations of wairakite, CaAl2 Si4 O12·2H2O", Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 27 (4): 259–282, Bibcode:1970CoMP...27..259L, doi:10.1007/BF00389814