News News
Contact us
  • Customer service number:64321087
  • Commercial service telephone:13918059423
  • Technical service telephone:13918059423
  • Contact person: Mr. Cui 
  • Service email:shxtb@163.com
  • Address: room 107, building 8, no. 100, guilin road, xuhui district, Shanghai

Unappreciated Rhabdophane is the forgotten host of rich rare-earth elements

The date of: 2025-04-08
viewed: 0

source:Murdoch University

Prodigious siblings can be annoying. All too often, they steal the spotlight and cast behind them an infuriating shadow of achievement and high expectation. The same is true in mineralogy, where some minerals have long existed in the shadow of their illustrious kin.

For instance, when asked to name a phosphate mineral enriched in rare earth elements (REEs, lanthanum to lutetium, yttrium and scandium), most geoscientists will say monazite (REEPO)—a global superstar of geochronology, nuclear waste storage and critical rare earth element mineralization that forms across many hydrothermal, metamorphic and igneous environments.

With 80% of the world's rare-earth elements—which are essential for the development of renewable technologies and for combating climate change—deriving from either monazite or its carbonate-rich cousin bastnäsite (REECO3F), it is perhaps then unsurprising that monazite's hydrous sibling rhabdophane (REEPO4 · xH2O, x = 0–1) gets so frequently overlooked.

The origins of rhabdophane's relative obscurity lie in its geological nature. Rhabdophane forms exclusively from low temperature (<250 °C) fluids, which causes it to precipitate as a fine-grained, porous and analytically challenging mineral across a smaller diversity of rocks than monazite.

Still, there are important rare-earth-mineralizing systems where rhabdophane should be considered as the star of the show. For example, rhabdophane is more likely than monazite to precipitate during chemical weathering, such that it is the dominant authigenic REE-phosphate mineral in most regolith-hosted deposits that account for more than 80% of global heavy-rare-earth-element (europium to lutetium) resources.

Since mineralization of the rare-earth elements in these deposits occurs via their easily leachable adsorption onto clay minerals, their alternate capture by insoluble rhabdophane is detrimental to economic accumulation and is therefore essential to understand. Rare earth mineralization in other types of regolith deposit can also be mineral-hosted, like at the Mt Weld carbonatite where rhabdophane exists as an important source of critical metals despite the controls on its natural formation, which has received little direct investigation until recently.

Elsewhere, rhabdophane may also form during the low-temperature hydrothermal alteration of rare earth element-rich igneous intrusions like carbonatites and pegmatites. In these instances, rhabdophane presents a useful tool to help understand the nature of associated rare-earth element (re)mobilization or accumulation during alteration, since it intrinsically offers information as to the temperature of the hydrothermal fluid.

For this information to be known, however, the rhabdophane must be accurately discerned from monazite. In cases where it isn't, the imprecise identification of rhabdophane relative to its overbearing anhydrous sibling may lead to critical rare earth element deposits being under-characterized or mischaracterized.

Since rhabdophane is a low-temperature mineral, it also forms close to the Earth's surface and impacts our daily lives. Rhabdophane governs contaminant transport and nutrient availability in soils, forms in nuclear waste repositories as a phase that controls the solubility of the actinides—a group of radioactive elements—and is even found to have formed in human lungs after what is hoped was a single instance of two photographers inhaling rare-earth-oxide-rich lamp ash.

Monazite's under-appreciated sibling therefore deserves more attention. An improved understanding and identification of rhabdophane holds untold potential not only for the characterization of rare earth element deposits, but also for uranium-thorium-lead geochronometry that is underutilized in hydrothermal systems which are too cold for monazite to precipitate.

Sure, rhabdophane is often a fibrous, fine-grained and analytically challenging mess of a mineral, but it is both fair and scientifically beneficial that rhabdophane be loved by way of rigorous investigation. After all, it is important that all rare earth minerals are considered.

The article "Rare-earth-rich rhabdophane" is published in Nature Geoscience.


Hot News / Related to recommend
  • 2025 - 04 - 30
    Click on the number of times: 3
    source:presstvThe pilot plant at the Abbas Abad Industrial Town has been indigenously designed and built by young Iranian experts, he said, hailing it a “great achievement” which will enable the count...
  • 2025 - 04 - 29
    Click on the number of times: 0
    source:Tohoku UniversityA new catalyst structure offers a potential pathway toward more cost-effective hydrogen production via water electrolysis. The material centers on mesoporous single-crystalline...
  • 2025 - 04 - 28
    Click on the number of times: 0
    source:Phys.orgThe willingness of the 4f orbitals of lanthanide metals to participate in chemical reactions is as rare as their presence in Earth's crust. A recent study, however, witnessed the 4f...
  • 2025 - 04 - 25
    Click on the number of times: 0
    source:ACS PubicationsRare-earth adatoms on surfaces have been studied for potential atomic-scale magnetic storage, quantum sensing, and quantum computing applications. Despite accumulating experiment...
  • Copyright ©Copyright 2018 2020 Shanghai rare earth association All Rights Reserved Shanghai ICP NO.2020034223
    the host:Shanghai Association of Rare Earth the guide:Shanghai Development and Application Office of Rare Earth the organizer:Shanghai rare earth industry promotion center
    犀牛云提供云计算服务