Mohs Scale of Mineral Hardness
Mohs Scale of Mineral Hardness
Mohs Scale of Mineral Hardness
Minerals
The Mohs scale of mineral hardness is based on the ability of one natural sample of matter to scratch another. The
samples of matter used by Mohs are all minerals. Minerals are pure substances found in nature. Rocks are made up
of one or more minerals.[5] As the hardest known naturally occurring substance when the scale was designed,
diamonds are at the top of the scale. The hardness of a material is measured against the scale by finding the hardest
material that the given material can scratch, and/or the softest material that can scratch the given material. For
example, if some material is scratched by apatite but not by fluorite, its hardness on the Mohs scale would fall
between 4 and 5.[6]
The Mohs scale is a purely ordinal scale. For example, corundum (9) is twice as hard as topaz (8), but diamond (10)
is four times as hard as corundum. The table below shows comparison with absolute hardness measured by a
sclerometer, with pictorial examples.[7] [8]
Mohs hardness
Mineral
Chemical formula
Absolute hardness
Talc
Mg3Si4O10(OH)2
Gypsum
CaSO42H2O
Calcite
CaCO3
Fluorite
CaF2
21
Apatite
Ca5(PO4)3(OH,Cl,F)
48
Orthoclase Feldspar
KAlSi3O8
72
Quartz
SiO2
100
Topaz
Al2SiO4(OH,F)2
200
Image
Corundum
Al2O3
400
10
Diamond
1600
On the Mohs scale, graphite (a principal constituent of pencil "lead") has a hardness of 1.5; a fingernail, 2.22.5; a
copper penny, 3.23.5; a pocketknife 5.1; a knife blade, 5.5; window glass plate, 5.5; and a steel file, 6.5.[9] A streak
plate (unglazed porcelain) has a hardness of 7.0. Using these ordinary materials of known hardness can be a simple
way to approximate the position of a mineral on the scale.[1]
Intermediate hardness
The table below incorporates additional substances that may fall between levels:
Hardness
Substance or mineral
0.20.3
caesium, rubidium
0.50.6
1
1.5
2
2.5 to 3
talc
gallium, strontium, indium, tin, barium, thallium, lead, graphite
[10]
4 to 4.5
5
5.5
platinum, steel
apatite, cobalt, zirconium, palladium, tooth enamel, obsidian (volcanic glass)
beryllium, molybdenum, hafnium
6 to 7
glass, fused quartz, iron pyrite, silicon, ruthenium, iridium, tantalum, opal
7
7.5 to 8
8
8.5
9-9.5
9.510
10
diamond
>10
Hardness (Vickers)
Comparison between Hardness (Mohs) and Hardness (Vickers):[15]
Mineral
name
Hardness (Mohs)
Hardness (Vickers)
kg/mm2
Graphite
1-2
VHN10=7 - 11
Tin
1 - 2
VHN10=7 - 9
Bismuth
2 - 2
VHN100=16 - 18
Gold
2 - 3
VHN10=30 - 34
Silver
2 - 3
VHN100=61 - 65
Chalcocite
2 - 3
VHN100=84 - 87
Copper
2 - 3
VHN100=77 - 99
Galena
VHN100=79 - 104
Sphalerite
3 - 4
VHN100=208 - 224
Heazlewoodite 4
VHN100=230 - 254
Carrollite
4 - 5
VHN100=507 - 586
Goethite
5 - 5
VHN100=667
Hematite
5-6
VHN100=1,000 - 1,100
Chromite
VHN100=1,278 - 1,456
Anatase
5 - 6
VHN100=616 - 698
Rutile
6 - 6
VHN100=894 - 974
Pyrite
6 - 6
VHN100=1,505 - 1,520
Bowieite
VHN100=858 - 1,288
Euclase
VHN100=1,310
Chromium
VHN100=1,875 - 2,000
References
[1] Encyclopdia Britannica. 2009. Encyclopdia Britannica Online. 22 Feb. 2009 "Mohs hardness." (http:/ / www. britannica. com/ EBchecked/
topic/ 387714/ Mohs-hardness)
[2] Theophrastus on Stones (http:/ / www. farlang. com/ gemstones/ theophrastus-on-stones/ page_148/ view?searchterm=scratch)
[3] Pliny the Elder.Naturalis Historia.Book 37.Chap. 15. ADamas: six varieties of it. Two remedies. (http:/ / www. perseus. tufts. edu/ cgi-bin/
ptext?lookup=Plin. + Nat. + 37. 15)
[4] Pliny the Elder.Naturalis Historia.Book 37.Chap. 76. The methods of testing precious stones. (http:/ / www. perseus. tufts. edu/ cgi-bin/
ptext?lookup=Plin. + Nat. + 37. 76)
[5] Learn science, Intermediate p. 42
[6] American Federation of Mineralogical Societies. "Mohs Scale of Mineral Hardness" (http:/ / www. amfed. org/ t_mohs. htm)
[7] Amethyst Galleries' Mineral Gallery What is important about hardness? (http:/ / www. galleries. com/ minerals/ hardness. htm)
[8] Inland Lapidary Mineral Hardness and Hardness Scales (http:/ / www. inlandlapidary. com/ user_area/ hardness. asp)
[9] William S. Cordua (1998). "The Hardness of Minerals and Rocks" (http:/ / www. gemcutters. org/ LDA/ hardness. htm). Lapidary Digest. .
Retrieved 2007-08-19. Hosted at International Lapidary Association (http:/ / www. gemcutters. org/ )
[10] L. I. berger "semiconductor materials" CRC press, 1996 ISBN 0849389127, p. 126
[11] Weintraub E. (1911). "On the properties and preparation of the element boron.". J. Ind. Eng. Chem. 3 (5): 299301.
doi:10.1021/ie50029a007.
[12] Solozhenko, V. L.; Kurakevych O. O.; Oganov A. R. (2008). "On the hardness of a new boron phase, orthorhombic -B28". Journal of
Superhard Materials 30 (6): 428429. doi:10.3103/s1063457608060117.. Open access: (http:/ / mysbfiles. stonybrook. edu/ ~aoganov/ files/
JSM-2008-6b-e. pdf)
Mohs hardness of elements is taken from G.V. Samsonov (Ed.) in Handbook of the physicochemical properties of
the elements, IFI-Plenum, New York, USA, 1968.
Cordua, William S. "The Hardness of Minerals and Rocks" (http://www.gemcutters.org/LDA/hardness.htm).
Lapidary Digest, c. 1990.
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