Acanthite
| Acanthite | |
|---|---|
| Crystallized acanthite (4.0 × 2.5 × 1.5 cm) from Imiter mine, Jbel Saghro mountain range, Morocco | |
| General | |
| Category | Sulfide mineral | 
| Formula | Ag2S | 
| IMA symbol | Aca | 
| Strunz classification | 2.BA.30a | 
| Crystal system | Monoclinic | 
| Crystal class | Prismatic (2/m) (same H-M symbol) | 
| Space group | P21/n | 
| Unit cell | a = 4.229 Å, b = 6.931 Å c = 7.862 Å; β = 99.61°; Z = 4 | 
| Identification | |
| Color | Iron-black | 
| Crystal habit | Primary crystals rare, prismatic to long prismatic, elongated along [001], may be tubular; massive. Commonly paramorphic after the cubic high-temperature phase ("argentite"), of original cubic or octahedral habit | 
| Twinning | Polysynthetic on {111}, may be very complex due to inversion; contact on {101} | 
| Cleavage | Indistinct | 
| Fracture | Uneven | 
| Tenacity | Sectile | 
| Mohs scale hardness | 2.0–2.5 | 
| Luster | Metallic | 
| Streak | Black | 
| Diaphaneity | Opaque | 
| Specific gravity | 7.20–7.22 | 
| References | |
Acanthite is a form of silver sulfide with the chemical formula Ag2S. It crystallizes in the monoclinic system and is the stable form of silver sulfide below 173 °C (343 °F). Argentite is the stable form above that temperature. As argentite cools below that temperature its cubic form is distorted to the monoclinic form of acanthite. Below 173 °C acanthite forms directly. Acanthite is the only stable form in normal air temperature.