Notes:
- This question is in regard to my Minecraft mod. To those who don't know, Minecraft is a first person survival game by Mojang, where the players' objective is to become self sufficient and survive in a hostile environment, having nothing but nature to rely upon for all of their resources. A mod is a modification made to the game (encouraged by Mojang) that adds something to the players' experience. Mods cannot be sold. A mod developer distributes his/her mod for free. My Minecraft mod focus on adding realistic chemistry to the game.
- My source for this question was http://geology.com/minerals/
- I'm aware these rock types are far from pure in nature, but I'm willing to disregard that, for the sake of simplicity, since mineralogy is already a very complex field, and realistic metal extraction from an ore goes far beyond the scope of the mod I have in mind.
- I will be doing similar questions about andesite and diorite.
For this question I'm focusing on a way to decompose granite into useful substances. In reality, thinking in industrial scale, this probably is never done, because of the costs I assume are involved and the return.
Most of these rocks contain Quartz ($\ce{SiO_2}$ crystalline) in abundance. Quartz, for whatever reason, happens to be a mineral found only in the nether in Minecraft, a hellish dimension the player can travel to after building a proper portal (can't be done early in the game). This means these rocks (in fact all rocks, but lets focus on granite, because it lacks any function in the game) can be a source of Quartz.
Granite is also rich in Orthoclase feldspar, which has the chemical formula $\ce{KAlSi_3O_8}$. Looks like a very poor source of aluminum and potassium, but a source nonetheless, and in a Minecraft game, the player doesn't need to worry about industrial scale production, since whatever he/she does, is only for him/her and friends. I don't know the structure of this species. It's probably an oxide, but unlike $\ce{SiO_2}$ it probably has some weird bonds going on.
Another major component of granite is Plagioclase feldspar, which is made of these two chemical compounds in equal concentrations: $\ce{NaAlSi_3O_8}$ and $\ce{CaAl_2Si_2O_8}$. Poor sources of aluminum, sodium and calcium.
The two other components of granite are amphiboles and micas. Amphiboles comprise a large variety of minerals, all of them contain a double hydroxyl group in their formulas. Similarly to orthoclase and plagioclase, they all contain silicon and oxygen. I doubt these are silicon oxides, or Arrhenius bases, they probably belong to some college level chemical group that we don't see in highschool. Here's a link to the chemical formulas of all Amphiboles: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amphibole#Chemical_formula They look like extremely poor sources of metals like aluminum, lithium, iron, sodium, calcium, magnesium and potassium.
Now micas. Micas are described by the formula
$\ce{X_2Y_{4–6}Z_8O_{20}(OH,F)_4}$
in which
X is K, Na, or Ca or less commonly Ba, Rb, or Cs;
Y is Al, Mg, or Fe or less commonly Mn, Cr, Ti, Li, etc.;
Z is chiefly Si or Al, but also may include Fe3+ or Ti.
Of interest in this formula are Rb and Cs, no matter how rare, because these are rare by definition. So, adding to the same elements as the above described amphiboles, micas have the advantage of also containing barium, rubidium (!), caesium (!!), manganese, chromium, Titanium and Lithium.
So my question is, what would be a lightly realistic approach to obtain usable compounds from granite? I'm sure real techniques do not exist, but what about science-fictional approaches? Chemists probably have unachievable dreams of tapping this or that potential source for obtaining huge amounts of a substance (until recently, one of those fancy dreams was a way to obtain drinkable water from sea water). I would love to hear any input from this (almost always) lovely community.
EDIT: I imagined a weird method: First, grind the stones to a thin powder, and then put them inside a "digestor" machine, that will use fictional enzymes and heat to break the compounds into quartz and oxides of each separate element, which are then reduced by electrolysis yielding the pure metals. Is it good enough?