Transmitted Phase Contrast Dispersion Staining, Single Polarizing Filter Parallel to
                Fiber Length
                
Definition/Function:
                Chrysotile asbestos is the fibrous form of the mineral lizardite of the serpentine group
                of minerals. Its chemical
                formula is Mg
3[Si
2O
5](OH)
4 with some Fe2+
                substituting for Mg. The amount of iron substitution affects the refractive
                indices and the birefringence. This is the most common form of asbestos used
                commercially, comprising about 93% of all
                the asbestos mined. It is also the least hazardous of the asbestos minerals. It is the
                most flexible of the asbestos
                minerals and is the one typically used in making asbestos cloth and asbestos paper.
                
Significance in the Environment:
                Serpentine is a very common metamorphic mineral. Most mountain ranges contain
                significant deposits of serpentine. The
                sands along streams and rivers flowing through these formations often contain chrysotile
                asbestos sand grains and fibers.
                Chrysotile asbestos in homes, offices, and schools is generally from asbestos containing
                construction materials but
                natural sources can’t be ruled out. Very high exposures have been measured in homes
                where “free” sand from local mountain
                stream or river beaches has been used in driveways and sandboxes. See “asbestos sands”
                in this gallery for an example.
                
Characteristic Features:
                Chrysotile has the lowest refractive indices of the six legally defined asbestos
                  minerals. The refractive index along the
                  length of the fiber ranges from 1.545 to 1.558. The refractive index across the
                  fiber ranges from 1.532 to 1.552. Low
                  iron content and missing OH groups drives the refractive index lower. High iron and
                  restructuring following the removal
                  of nearly all of the OH groups increases the refractive index. When thermally
                  modified the refractive indices may go as
                  high as 1.57 and though still a fiber, it looses its x-ray diffraction pattern as
                  chrysotile but has not yet become
                  forsterite. In this form it seems to become even more hazardous than chrysotile.
                  This is the material created on older
                  high temperature thermocouple leads, oven gaskets, and break drums. This form is
                  easily identified using light microscopy
                  but will not show up in an analysis based on x-ray or electron diffraction.
                On rare occasions parachrysotile is found with chrysotile. Parachrysotile has a
                  negative sign of elongation, the low
                  refractive index is oriented along the length of the fiber.
                Associated Particles:
                Commercial materials that contain chrysotile asbestos are often associated with plaster
                (gypsum, CaSO4-2H2O) and calcite
                (CaCO3) in textured ceilings and joint compounds, tar in roofing and mastics, paper
                fiber in sheet material, vinyl and
                calcite in floor tile, and cement in ceramic board and shingle products. Raw chrysotile
                is often associated with non-
                fibrous serpentines and magnetite inclusion.
                
References:
                1. Asbestos Textile Institute, HANDBOOK OF ASBESTOS TEXTILES, 3RD EDITION, 1967.
                2. Campbell, W.J., R.L. Blake, L.L. Brown, E.E. Cather, and J.J. Sjoberg, IC 8751;
                SELECTED SILICATE MINERALS AND THEIR
                ASBESTIFORM VARIETIES, US Dept. of the Interior, Bureau of Mines Information Circular,
                1977
                3. Deer, W. A., R. A. Howie, and J. Zussman, AN INTRODCUTION TO THE ROCK-FORMING
                MINERALS, ISBN 0-582-30094-0, pp.
                344-352, 1992
                4. Ledoux, R. L. (ed), SHORT COURSE IN MINERALOGICAL TECHNIQUES OF ASBESTOS
                DETERMINATION, Mineralogical Association of
                Canada, 1979. 
                5. Levadie, Benjamin (ed), DEFINITIONS FOR ASBESTOS AND OTHER HEALTH-RELATED SILICATES,
                ASTM STP 834, 1984. 
                6. Nolan, R. P., A. M. Langer, M Ross, F.J. Wicks, and R.F. Martin (eds), THE HEALTH
                EFFECTS OF CHRYSOTILE ASBESTOS, The
                Canadian Mineralogist, Special Publication 5, 2001.
                7. Riordon, P. H. (ed), GEOLOGY OF ASBESTOS DEPOSITS, Society of Mining Engineers, 1981.
                
                8. World Health Organization, ASBESTOS AND OTHER NATURAL MINERAL FIBRES, Environmental
                Health Criteria 53, 1986.