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The mineralogy of Lithium

General Properties
Symbol:Li
Atomic Number:3
Standard atomic weight (Ar):6.941(2)
Electron configuration:[He] 2s1
Photos
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0.5 grams lithium under argon.
>
Atomic Properties
Electronegativity (Pauling scale):0.98
Atomic Radius:167 pm
Ionic Radius:76 pm (+1)
Van der Waals Radius:182 pm
1st Ionization energy:520 kJ/mol
1st Electron affinity:-60 kJ/mol
Oxidation States:1
Physical Properties
Standard State:solid
Bonding Type:metallic
Melting Point:454 K
Boiling Point:1615 K
Density:0.54 g/cm3
Metal/Non-Metal:alkali metal
Main isotopes of Lithium
Isotope% in NatureHalf LifeDecay typeDecay product
6Li7.5%stable
7Li92.5%stable
Main ions of Lithium
NameIonExample minerals
lithiumLi+Petalite, Spodumene
Other Information
Year Discovered:1817
Discovered By:
08691750017362065137421.jpg
Johan August Arfwedson
Year Isolated:1821
Isolated By:
02595380017362065141789.jpg
William Thomas Brande
Named For:from Greek: lithos - "stone"
CPK color coding:#CC80FF
External Links:WikipediaWebElementsLos Alamos National LaboratoryTheodore Gray's PeriodicTable.com
Simple Compounds and Mineral Names
Nitrideslithium nitrideLi3N+1
Sulfideslithium sulfideLi2S+1
Selenideslithium selenideLi2Se+1
Tellurideslithium tellurideLi2Te+1
Hydrideslithium hydrideLiH+1
Hydroxideslithium hydroxideLiOH+1
Fluorideslithium fluorideLiF+1Griceite
Iodideslithium iodideLiI+1
Oxidesdlithium oxideLi2O+1
dilithium peroxideLi2O2+1
lithium superoxideLiO2+1
Carbonateslithium carbonateLi2CO3+1Zabuyelite
Nitrateslithium nitrateLiNO3+1
Sulfateslithium sulfateLi2SO4+1
Phosphateslithium phosphateLi3PO4+1Lithiophosphate
Lithium as a chromophore in minerals and gems
ChromophoreDescription
Li+Does NOT cause colour as it has no electrons in d-orbitals. Minerals where Li was previously thought to be a colouring agent probably contain other ions such as Mn2+.
Mineral Diversity of Lithium
3. Halides4 valid mineral species
4. Oxides 6 valid mineral species
5. Carbonates 4 valid mineral species
7. Sulfates 1 valid mineral species
8. Phosphates, Arsenates, Vanadates16 valid mineral species
9. Silicates 83 valid mineral species
Total:114 valid species containing essential Lithium
Minerals with the greatest weight % of Lithium
GriceiteLiF26.76 %
ZabuyeliteLi2CO318.79 %
LithiophosphateLi3PO417.98 %
LiberiteLi2BeSiO412.07 %
NalipoiteNaLi2PO410.53 %
CryolithioniteNa3Al2(LiF4)35.60 %
EucryptiteLiAlSiO45.51 %
SimferiteLiMg(PO4)5.50 %
MontebrasiteLiAl(PO4)(OH)4.76 %
AmblygoniteLiAl(PO4)F4.69 %
Geochemistry of Lithium
Goldschmidt classification:Lithophile
Li+ is essential to nutrition of at least some vertebrates ('essential minerals').
Elemental Abundance for Lithium
Crust (CRC Handbook)2.0 x 10-5mass fraction, kg/kg
Crust (Kaye & Laby)2.0 x 10-5mass fraction, kg/kg
Crust (Greenwood)1.8 x 10-5mass fraction, kg/kg
Crust (Ahrens/Taylor)1.3 x 10-5mass fraction, kg/kg
Crust (Ahrens/Wänke)1.37 x 10-5mass fraction, kg/kg
Upper Crust (Ahrens/Taylor)2.0 x 10-5mass fraction, kg/kg
Upper Crust (Ahrens/Shaw)2.2 x 10-5mass fraction, kg/kg
Sea Water (CRC Handbook)1.8 x 10-7mass per volume fraction, kg/L
Sea Water (Kaye & Laby)1.7 x 10-7mass per volume fraction, kg/L
The Sun (Kaye & Laby)4.0 x 10-7atom mole fraction relative to Si=1
Solar System (Kaye & Laby)5.7 x 10-5atom mole fraction relative to Si=1
Solar System (Ahrens)5.71 x 10-5 (9.2%)atom mole fraction relative to Si=1 (% uncertainty)
Element association of Lithium in the Mineral World
This table compares the known valid mineral species listed listed with Lithium and the other elements listed based on the official IMA formula. Note that unlike other sections on this page this includes non-essential elements.

The first data column contains the total number of minerals listed with Lithium and the element listed for that row.

The second data column lists this number as a percentage of all minerals listed with Lithium.

The final data column compares this percentage against the percentage of all minerals that contain the element listed in each row.

Click on a heading to sort.
ElementValid Minerals listed with element and Lithium% of Li mineralsRelative to % in all minerals
Oxygen119 minerals with Li and O96.75%19.50% higher
Silicon88 minerals with Li and Si71.54%159.04% higher
Hydrogen67 minerals with Li and H54.47%2.48% lower
Aluminium52 minerals with Li and Al42.28%111.07% higher
Sodium48 minerals with Li and Na39.02%107.61% higher
Fluorine36 minerals with Li and F29.27%269.06% higher
Potassium32 minerals with Li and K26.02%161.69% higher
Iron23 minerals with Li and Fe18.70%16.81% lower
Calcium21 minerals with Li and Ca17.07%31.69% lower
Phosphorus20 minerals with Li and P16.26%32.44% higher
Magnesium19 minerals with Li and Mg15.45%15.31% higher
Titanium16 minerals with Li and Ti13.01%86.97% higher
Manganese16 minerals with Li and Mn13.01%11.71% higher
Beryllium13 minerals with Li and Be10.57%382.73% higher
Boron12 minerals with Li and B9.76%92.81% higher
Caesium6 minerals with Li and Cs4.88%839.94% higher
Zirconium6 minerals with Li and Zr4.88%101.87% higher
Carbon4 minerals with Li and C3.25%59.98% lower
Chlorine2 minerals with Li and Cl1.63%78.06% lower
Barium2 minerals with Li and Ba1.63%65.19% lower
Vanadium2 minerals with Li and V1.63%66.24% lower
Yttrium2 minerals with Li and Y1.63%29.39% lower
Tin2 minerals with Li and Sn1.63%11.27% lower
Tantalum2 minerals with Li and Ta1.63%43.23% higher
Copper1 mineral with Li and Cu0.81%94.00% lower
Arsenic1 mineral with Li and As0.81%93.72% lower
Lanthanum1 mineral with Li and La0.81%39.60% lower
Cerium1 mineral with Li and Ce0.81%73.62% lower
Sulfur1 mineral with Li and S0.81%96.32% lower
Zinc1 mineral with Li and Zn0.81%85.64% lower
Rubidium1 mineral with Li and Rb0.81%902.60% higher
Strontium1 mineral with Li and Sr0.81%71.02% lower
Neodymium1 mineral with Li and Nd0.81%5.41% lower
Thorium1 mineral with Li and Th0.81%28.54% higher
Uranium1 mineral with Li and U0.81%84.14% lower
Periodic Table
1H 2He
3Li 4Be 5B 6C 7N 8O 9F 10Ne
11Na 12Mg 13Al 14Si 15P 16S 17Cl 18Ar
19K 20Ca 21Sc 22Ti 23V 24Cr 25Mn 26Fe 27Co 28Ni 29Cu 30Zn 31Ga 32Ge 33As 34Se 35Br 36Kr
37Rb 38Sr 39Y 40Zr 41Nb 42Mo 43Tc 44Ru 45Rh 46Pd 47Ag 48Cd 49In 50Sn 51Sb 52Te 53I 54Xe
55Cs 56Ba 57La 72Hf 73Ta 74W 75Re 76Os 77Ir 78Pt 79Au 80Hg 81Tl 82Pb 83Bi 84Po 85At 86Rn
87Fr 88Ra 89Ac 104Rd 105Db 106Sg 107Bh 108Hs 109Mt 110Ds 111Rg 112Cn 113Nh 114Fl 115Mc 116Lv 117Ts 118Og
 
58Ce 59Pr 60Nd 61Pm 62Sm 63Eu 64Gd 65Tb 66Dy 67Ho 68Er 69Tm 70Yb 71Lu
90Th 91Pa 92U 93Np 94Pu 95Am 96Cm 97Bk 98Cf 99Es 100Fm 101Md 102No 103Lr
Default Categories CPK Electronegativity Atomic Radius Lowest Oxidation Highest Oxidation Crustal Abundance Goldschmidt Mineral Species Minerals with Li Relative Frequency
Helium << Lithium >> Beryllium


Most widespread minerals containing Lithium
This list of minerals containing Lithium is built from the mindat.org locality database. This is based on the number of localities entered for mineral species and is therefore slanted towards minerals interesting to collectors with less coverage of common rock-forming-minerals so it does not give an undistorted distribution of Lithium mineral species. It is more useful when comparing rare species rather than common species.
NameFormulaCrystal SystemMindat Localities
SpodumeneLiAlSi2O6Monoclinic951
ElbaiteNa(Li1.5Al1.5)Al6(Si6O18)(BO3)3(OH)3(OH)Trigonal642
TriphyliteLiFe2+PO4Orthorhombic372
AmblygoniteLiAl(PO4)FTriclinic345
MontebrasiteLiAl(PO4)(OH)Triclinic268
Cookeite(LiAl4â—»)[AlSi3O10](OH)8Monoclinic234
LithiophiliteLiMn2+PO4Orthorhombic189
PetaliteLiAl(Si4O10)Monoclinic177
PolylithioniteKLi2Al(Si4O10)(F,OH)2Monoclinic131
Holmquistiteâ—»{Li2}{Mg3Al2}(Si8O22)(OH)2Orthorhombic66
Photos

Localities with greatest number of different Lithium mineral species
1Dara-i-Pioz Massif, Districts of Republican Subordination, Tajikistan20 Li minerals
2Tanco Mine, Bernic Lake, Lac-du-Bonnet area, Manitoba, Canada17 Li minerals
3Foote Lithium Co. Mine, Kings Mountain, Cleveland County, North Carolina, USA14 Li minerals
4La Mareta, Tenerife, Santa Cruz de Tenerife Province, Canary Islands, Spain14 Li minerals
5Koktokay No. 3 pegmatite (Altay No. 3 pegmatite), Altay Mine, Koktokay pegmatite field (Keketuohai pegmatite field), Fuyun Co. (Koktokay Co.), Aletai Prefecture (Altay Prefecture), Yili Hasake Autonomous Prefecture, Xinjiang, China13 Li minerals
6Red Cross Lake pegmatites, Red Cross Lake, Manitoba, Canada12 Li minerals
7Poudrette quarry (De-Mix quarry; Demix quarry; Uni-Mix quarry; Carrière Mont Saint-Hilaire; MSH), Mont Saint-Hilaire, La Vallée-du-Richelieu RCM, Montérégie, Québec, Canada11 Li minerals
8Buranga pegmatite, Muhororo, Ngororero District, Western Province, Rwanda9 Li minerals


Minor ores of Lithium
While traditionally lithium has been extracted from various lithium silicate minerals such as spodumene and petalite the majority of ltihium is now produced by processing lithium-rich brines.
NameFormulaCrystal System
SpodumeneLiAlSi2O6Monoclinic
PetaliteLiAl(Si4O10)Monoclinic
HectoriteNa0.3(Mg,Li)3(Si4O10)(F,OH)2Monoclinic
Lepidolite
Photos
 
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To cite: Ralph, J., Von Bargen, D., Martynov, P., Zhang, J., Que, X., Prabhu, A., Morrison, S. M., Li, W., Chen, W., & Ma, X. (2025). Mindat.org: The open access mineralogy database to accelerate data-intensive geoscience research. American Mineralogist, 110(6), 833–844. doi:10.2138/am-2024-9486.
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