Crocidolite Asbestos, Heat Modified
                Crocidolite asbestos turns red after long exposure to high
                  temperatures. It is still just
                  as hazadous as the unmodified material.
              
              
                Transmitted Off Crossed Polarized Light Illumination
                
Definition/Function:
                Crocidolite asbestos, the blue asbestos, is a fibrous amphibole with the chemical
                composition
                Na2Fe 5[Si8O22](OH) 2. It is one
                of the more hazardous asbestos
                minerals.
                Significance in the Environment:
                Crocidolite is the third most common commercial asbestos, behind Chrysotile and Amosite.
                It is used in the blue ceramic
                water pipe that was used widely in the past. It was commonly used in high temperature
                environments, like boiler. It is
                the only asbestos other than chrysotile that can be easily woven into cloth. It is rare
                as a natural mineral so when it
                is found in an environment it is usually the result of the degradation of an asbestos
                containing construction material.
                Characteristic Features:
                The blue color of Crocidolite is unique in the asbestos minerals though there are some
                other blue or blue-green mineral
                fibers. It has relatively high refractive indices, around 1.705. It has a dispersion of
                the birefringence that is
                visible in thin fibers. For these thin fibers they appear pink between crossed
                polarizers. For thicker fibers the blue
                absorbs most of the red end of the spectrum and the fibers appear blue. This is a very
                characteristic feature.
                Associated Particles:
                Crocidolite is often used with Chrysotile asbestos.
                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. 261-267, 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. Riordon, P. H. (ed), GEOLOGY OF ASBESTOS DEPOSITS, Society of Mining Engineers, 1981.
                
                7. World Health Organization, ASBESTOS AND OTHER NATURAL MINERAL FIBRES, Environmental
                Health Criteria 53, 1986.