Minerals and the crystalline state

3.6 Hardness

Hardness is loosely defined as the resistance of a material to scratching or indentation. The absolute hardness of a material can be determined precisely, using a mechanical instrument to measure the indentation of a special probe into a crystal surface. However, you can get a general idea of a mineral's relative hardness by undertaking a few simple scratch tests.

The nineteenth-century German mineralogist, Friedrich Mohs, devised a useful scale of mineral hardnesses, consisting of well-known minerals ranked in order of increasing hardness, from talc, with a hardness of 1, to diamond, with a hardness of 10 (Table 2).

Table 2 Mohs' hardness scale.

Mohs' hardness  Reference mineral  Non-mineral example (hardness in brackets)
1 talc
2 gypsum
fingernail (2.5)
3 calcite
copper coin1 (3.5)
4 fluorite
5 apatite
window glass/ordinary knife blade (5.5)
6 orthoclase feldspar2
hardened steel (6.5)
7 quartz
8 topaz
9 corundum
10 diamond
1 Many of today's 'copper coins' are copper-plated steel and are harder below the copper coating. 2 Other types of feldspar may have a slightly greater hardness, between 6 and 6.5.

Compared with an absolute hardness scale, Mohs' scale is highly non-linear (diamond is about four times harder than corundum; Figures 12c and b) but, because the scale uses familiar minerals, it provides a quick and easy reference for geologists in the field.

Figure 12 Three very hard minerals: (a) topaz (5 cm long); (b) corundum (variety ruby) (1 cm); (c) diamond (6 mm).

Minerals with a hardness of less than 2.5 may be scratched by a fingernail (Video 4), whereas those with a hardness of less than 3.5 may be scratched by a copper coin (Video 5), and so on.

Active content not displayed. This content requires JavaScript to be enabled, and a recent version of Flash Player to be installed.
Video 4 Scratch test on gypsum. (There is no voice-over in this video.)
Active content not displayed. This content requires JavaScript to be enabled, and a recent version of Flash Player to be installed.
Video 5 Scratch test on calcite. (There is no voice-over in this video.)

Will quartz scratch topaz (Figure 12a)?

Answer

The hardness of quartz is 7 whereas topaz has a hardness of 8, so topaz will scratch quartz, but not the other way round.

Using evidence from the Digital Geology Kit, which of the following minerals is the hardest, and which is the softest: galena, hematite, pyrite?

Answer

Pyrite is the hardest (6-6.5), galena the softest (2.5). Hematite has hardness 5-6.

Hardness should not be confused with toughness, which is the resistance of a material to breaking. Many minerals are hard, but they may not be tough. Diamond, for example, is the hardest known material, but it is not tough: it will shatter if dropped onto a hard surface.