BBC Science Focus

Joke’s on us: fool’s gold may have contained the real thing all along

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The mineral pyrite has another name: fool’s gold, as its metallic yellow crystals trick miners into thinking they’ve struck real gold. It’s not without its uses – the compound creates sparks when hit with steel, which can be used to start a Ƃre s but it’s always been seen as worthless compared to its coveted cousin.

Now, scientists have discovered that the mineral, made of iron and sulphur, actually contains a type of gold hidden within its crystal structure. Research suggests that extracting this gold could be a more sustainabl­e method of getting the metal than current energy-intensive mining processes.

Fool’s gold is found inside rocks beneath Earth’s surface, sometimes near real gold deposits. The mineral has a crystallin­e structure, which grows over the years and stretches within the rock. Each time the crystals stretch and twist, they break the bonds of nearby atoms. When these bonds are remade, they can sometimes contain small imperfecti­ons, areas called ‘dislocatio­ns’ that are each around 100,000 times smaller than the width of a human hair.

According to new research, these tiny dislocatio­ns can actually contain gold particles.

“Our research shows that gold can be captured when the crystals are being twisted during their history,” said the lead researcher of the new study,

Dr Denis Fougerouse from Curtin University in Western Australia.

This gold is different to the gold of your wedding band or Ƃlling it’s known as ‘invisible’ gold because it Instead, an atom probe is needed to analyse the tiny amounts found within pyrite’s crystal structure.

“[Invisible] gold is not as valuable as ‘free gold’, where the gold is available by simple physical separation,” explained Fougerouse. “But it’s still proƂtable with the right infrastruc­tures and just as precious as any other kind of gold.”

Gold has also been found in fool’s gold in the form of an alloy, where the pyrite and gold atoms are mixed together. “It’s possible that the gold used to make the jewellery you like could have been extracted from pyrite originally,” said Fougerouse. To extract the gold from these minerals however, miners need to use large reactors that require huge amounts of energy to run.

Fougerouse and the team hope that their new discovery could lead to better, more environmen­tally friendly ways to mine gold. They’ve come up with a (currently untested) process for leaching the gold particles from the pyrite crystals, and even suggest using bacteria to ‘attack’ the dislocatio­ns to break down the crystal structure and release the gold.

But it would be foolish to think our future Ƃllings and wedding rings will be made from pyrite’s ‘invisible gold’.

“Pyrite is a very common mineral and only pyrites that crystallis­ed in the right geological setting will host signiƂcant gold,” said (ougerouse. “5ome pyrites still live up to their reputation of fool’s gold!”

 ??  ?? Iron pyrite (above and below), otherwise unflatteri­ngly known as fool’s gold
Iron pyrite (above and below), otherwise unflatteri­ngly known as fool’s gold
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