Bauxite is the major source of aluminum sesquioxide (alumina, Al
2O
3) worldwide. Bauxite is
a soft and red clay, rich in alumina. From a geological point of view bauxite is defined as a residual
sedimentary rock in the laterite family that results from in situ superficial weathering in moist tropical climates of clays, clayey limestones, or high-alumina-content silicoaluminous
igneous and metamorphic rocks containing feldspars and micas.
Bauxite is a sedimentary rock, so it has neither a precise
definition nor chemical formula. From a mineralogical point of view, bauxite is mainly composed of hydrated alumina minerals such as gibbsite [Al(OH)
3 or Al
2O
3.3H
2O, monoclinic] in
recent tropical and equatorial bauxite deposits, while boehmite [AlO(OH) or Al
2O
3.H
2O, orthorhombic] and, to a lesser extent, diaspore [AlO(OH) or Al
2O3
.H
2O, orthorhombic] are the
major minerals in subtropical and temperate bauxite old deposits. The average chemical
composition of bauxite is 45 to 60 wt.% Al
2O
3
and 10 to 30 wt.% Fe
2O
3, the remainder consisting of silica, calcia, titanium dioxide, and water.