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Chalcopyrite

From cornish semiconductor corporation
Revision as of 15:59, 21 June 2026 by Cornish semiconductor (talk | contribs) (Created page with "* Lustre:Metallic * Transparency:Opaque * Colour:Brass yellow, often with an iridescent tarnish. * Streak:Greenish black * Hardness:3½ - 4 on Mohs scale * Tenacity:Brittle * Cleavage:Poor/Indistinct Indistinct on {011}, sometimes distinct. * Fracture:Irregular/Uneven [https://www.mindat.org/min-955.html Data from mindat.org] Chalcopyrite is the main ore of copper, is softer than pyrite and fairly easy to find in usable quantities. It's rarely well crystallised, but fo...")
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  • Lustre:Metallic
  • Transparency:Opaque
  • Colour:Brass yellow, often with an iridescent tarnish.
  • Streak:Greenish black
  • Hardness:3½ - 4 on Mohs scale
  • Tenacity:Brittle
  • Cleavage:Poor/Indistinct Indistinct on {011}, sometimes distinct.
  • Fracture:Irregular/Uneven

Data from mindat.org

Chalcopyrite is the main ore of copper, is softer than pyrite and fairly easy to find in usable quantities. It's rarely well crystallised, but forms thick veins and large blobs, usually in quartz.

Due to the copper content it has a very low overall resistance, I find it one of the easiest minerals to find good semiconducting junctions, it doesn't seem to alter much with oxidisation or weathering.

Famously it was combined with zincite to build bi-crystal "Perikon" detectors, invented in 1908 by Greenleaf Whittier Pickard.