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1.
Single-crystal study of the structure (R = 0.0268) was performed for garyansellite from Rapid Creek, Yukon, Canada. The mineral is orthorhombic, Pbna, a = 9.44738(18), b = 9.85976(19), c = 8.14154(18) Å, V = 758.38(3) Å3, Z = 4. An idealized formula of garyansellite is Mg2Fe3+(PO4)2(OH) · 2H2O. Structurally the mineral is close to other members of the phosphoferrite–reddingite group. The structure contains layers of chains of M(2)O4(OH)(H2O) octahedra which share edges to form dimers and connected by common edges with isolated from each other M(1)O4(H2O)2 octahedra. The neighboring chains are connected to the layer through the common vertices of M(2) octahedra and octaahedral layers are linked through PO4 tetrahedra.  相似文献   

2.
Abramovite, a new mineral species, has been found as fumarole crust on the Kudryavy volcano, Iturup Island, Kuriles, Russia. The mineral is associated with pyrrhotite, pyrite, würtzite, galena, halite, sylvite, and anhydrite. Abramovite occurs as tiny elongated lamellar crystals up to 1 mm long and 0.2 mm wide (average 300 × 50 μ m), which make up chaotic intergrowths in the narrow zone of fumarole crust formed at ~600°C. Most crystals are slightly striated along the elongation. The new mineral is silver gray, with a metallic luster and black streak. Under reflected light, abramovite is white with a yellowish gray hue. It has weak bireflectance; anisotropy is distinct without color effects. The chemical composition (electron microprobe) is as follows, wt %: 20.66 S, 0.98 Se, 0.01 Cu, 0.03 Cd, 11.40 In, 12.11 Sn, 37.11 Pb, 17.30 Bi; the total is 99.60. The empirical formula calculated on the basis of 12 atoms is Pb1.92Sn1.09In1.06Bi0.89(S6.90Se0.13)7.03. The simplified formula is Pb2SnInBiS7. The strongest eight lines in the X-ray powder pattern [d, Å (I)(hkl)] are 5.90(36)(100), 3.90(100)(111), 3.84(71)(112), 3.166(26)(114), 2.921(33)(115), 2.902(16)(200), 2.329(15)(214), 2.186(18)(125). The selected area electron diffraction (SAED) patterns of abramovite are quite similar to those of the homologous cylindrite series minerals. The new mineral is characterized by noncommensurate structure composed of regularly alternated pseudotetragonal and pseudohexagonal sheets. The structure parameters determined from the SAED patterns and X-ray powder diffraction data for pseudotetragonal subcell are: a = 23.4(3), b = 5.77(2), c = 5.83(1) Å, α = 89.1(5) °, β = 89.9(7)°, γ = 91.5(7)°, V = 790(8) Å3; for pseudohexagonal subcell: a = 23.6(3), b = 3.6(1), c = 6.2(1) Å, α = 91(2)°, β = 92(1)°, γ = 90(2)°, V = 532(10) Å3. Abramovite is triclinic, space group P(1). The new mineral is named in honor of Russian mineralogist Dmitry Abramov. The type material of abramovite has been deposited in the Fersman Mineralogical Museum, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow.  相似文献   

3.
Chesnokovite, a new mineral species, is the first natural sodium orthosilicate. It has been found in an ussingite vein uncovered by underground mining at Mt. Kedykverpakhk, Lovozero alkaline pluton, Kola Peninsula, Russia. Natrolite, sodalite, vuonnemite, steenstrupine-(Ce), phosinaite-(Ce), natisite, gobbinsite, villiaumite, and natrosilite are associated minerals. Chesnokovite occurs as intergrowths with natrophospate in pockets up to 4 × 6 × 10 cm in size consisting of chaotic segregations of coarse lamellar crystals (up to 0.05 × 1 × 2 cm in size) flattened along [010]. The crystals are colorless and transparent. The aggregates are white to pale brownish yellowish, with a white streak and a vitreous luster. The cleavage is perfect parallel to (010) and distinct to (100) and (001). The fracture is stepped. The Mohs’ hardness is 2.5. The measured density is 1.68 g/cm3; the density calculated on the basis of an empirical formula is 1.60 g/cm3 and 1.64 g/cm3 on the basis of an idealized formula. The new mineral is optically biaxial, positive, α = 1.449, β = 1.453, γ = 1.458, 2V meas = 80°, and Z = b. The infrared spectrum is given. The chemical composition (Si determined with electron microprobe; Na, K, and Li, with atomic emission analysis; and H2O, with the Alimarin method) is as follows, wt %: 21.49 Na2O, 0.38 K2O, 0.003 Li2O, 21.42 SiO2, 54.86 H2O, total is 98.153. The empirical formula calculated on the basis of O2(OH)2 is as follows: (Na1.96K0.02)Σ1.98Si1.005O2(OH)2 · 7.58H2O. The simplified formula (Z = 8) is Na2[SiO2(OH)2] · 8H2O. The new mineral is orthorhombic, and the space group is Ibca. The unit-cell dimensions are: a = 11.7119, b = 19.973, c = 11.5652 Å, and V = 2299.0 Å3. The strongest reflections in the X-ray powder pattern [d, Å (I, %)(hkl)] are: 5.001(30)(211), 4.788(42)(022), 3.847(89)(231), 2.932(42)(400), 2.832(35)(060), 2.800(97)(332, 233), and 2.774(100)(341, 143, 114). The crystal structure was studied using the Rietveld method, R p = 5.77, R wp = 7.77, R B = 2.07, and R F = 1.74. The structure is composed of isolated [SiO2(OH)2] octahedrons and the chains of edge-shared [Na[H2O)6] octahedrons. The Si and Na polyhedrons are linked only by H-bonds, and this is the cause of the low stability of chesnokovite under atmospheric conditions. The new mineral is named in memory of B.V. Chesnokov (1928–2005), an outstanding mineralogist. The type material of chesnokovite is deposited in the Fersman Mineralogical Museum, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow.  相似文献   

4.
Aqualite, a new eudialyte-group mineral from hydrothermally altered peralkaline pegmatites of the Inagli alkaline pluton (Sakha-Yakutia, Russia) is described in this paper. Natrolite, microcline, eckermanite, aegirine, batisite, innelite, lorezenite, thorite, and galena are associated minerals. Aqualite occurs as isometric crystals up to 3-cm across. The color is pale pink, with a white streak and vitreous luster. The mineral is transparent. The fracture is conchoidal. The mineral is brittle; no cleavage or parting is observed. The Mohs’ hardness is 4 to 5. The density is 2.58(2) g/cm3 (measured by the volumetric method) and 2.66 g/cm3 (calculated). Aqualite is optically uniaxial (+), α = 1.569(1) and β = 1.571(1). The mineral is pleochroic from colorless to pale pink on X and pink on Y, α < β. Aqualite is weakly fluorescent with a dull yellow color under ultraviolet light. The mineral is stable in 50% HCl and HNO3 at room temperature. Weight loss after ignition at 500°C is 9.8%. Aqualite is monoclinic, and the space group is R3. The unit-cell dimensions are a = 14.078(3) Å, c = 31.24(1) Å, V = 5362 Å3, and Z = 3. The strongest reflections in the X-ray powder pattern [d, Å (I)(hkl)] are: 4.39(100)(2005), 2.987(100)(315), 2.850(79)(404), 10.50(44)(003), 6.63(43)(104), 7.06(42)(110), 3.624(41)(027), and 11.43(39)(101). The chemical composition (electron microprobe, H2O determined with the Penfield method) is as follows (wt %): 2.91 Na2O, 1.93 K2O, 11.14 CaO, 1.75 SrO, 2.41 BaO, 0.56 FeO, 0.30 MnO, 0.17 La2O3, 0.54 Ce2O3, 0.36 Nd2O3, 0.34 Al2O3, 52.70 SiO2, 12.33 ZrO2, O.78 TiO2, 0.15 Nb2O5; 1.50 Cl, 9.93 H2O,-O=Cl2 0.34; where the total is 99.46. The empirical formula calculated on the basis of Si + Zr + Ti + Al + Nb = 29 apfu is as follows: [(H3O)7.94Na2.74K1.20Sr0.49Ba0.46Fe0.23Mn0.12]Σ13.18(Ca5.79REE0.19)Σ5.98 (Zr2.92Ti0.08)Σ3.0(Si25.57Ti0.21Al0.19Nb0.03)S26.0[O66.46(OH)5.54]Σ72.0 [(OH)2.77Cl1.23]Σ4.0. The simplified formula is (H3O)8(Na,K,Sr)5Ca6Zr3Si26O66(OH)9Cl. Aqualite differs from typical eudialyte by the extremely low contents of Na and Fe, with more than 50% Na being replaced with the (H3O)+ group. The presence of oxonium ions is confirmed by IR spectroscopic and X-ray single-crystal diffraction analysis. The mineral is compared with five structurally studied high-oxonium analogues from alkaline plutons of other regions. All of these minerals were formed at a relatively low temperature through the ion-exchange transformation of “protoeudialytes”; the successor minerals inherited the principal structural and compositional features of the precursor minerals. The name aqualite is derived from the Latin aqua in reference to its specific chemical composition. The type material of aqualite is deposited in the Fersman Mineralogical Museum, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow.  相似文献   

5.
A new mineral kobyashevite, Cu5(SO4)2(OH)6·4H2O (IMA 2011–066), was found at the Kapital’naya mine, Vishnevye Mountains, South Urals, Russia. It is a supergene mineral that occurs in cavities of a calcite-quartz vein with pyrite and chalcopyrite. Kobyashevite forms elongated crystals up to 0.2 mm typically curved or split and combined into thin crusts up to 1?×?2 mm. Kobyashevite is bluish-green to turquoise-coloured. Lustre is vitreous. Mohs hardness is 2½. Cleavage is {010} distinct. D(calc.) is 3.16 g/cm3. Kobyashevite is optically biaxial (?), α 1.602(4), β 1.666(5), γ 1.679(5), 2 V(meas.) 50(10)°. The chemical composition (wt%, electron-microprobe data) is: CuO 57.72, ZnO 0.09, FeO 0.28, SO3 23.52, H2O(calc.) 18.39, total 100.00. The empirical formula, calculated based on 18 O, is: Cu4.96Fe0.03Zn0.01S2.01O8.04(OH)5.96·4H2O. Kobyashevite is triclinic, $ P\overline{\,1 } $ , a 6.0731(6), b 11.0597(13), c 5.5094(6)?Å, α 102.883(9)°, β 92.348(8)°, γ 92.597(9)°, V 359.87(7)?Å3, Z?=?1. Strong reflections of the X-ray powder pattern [d,Å-I(hkl)] are: 10.84–100(010); 5.399–40(020); 5.178–12(110); 3.590–16(030); 2.691–16(20–1, 040, 002), 2.653–12(04–1, 02–2), 2.583–12(2–11, 201, 2–1–1), 2.425–12(03–2, 211, 131). The crystal structure (single-crystal X-ray data, R?=?0.0399) сontains [Cu4(SO4)2(OH)6] corrugated layers linked via isolated [CuO2(H2O)4] octahedra; the structural formula is CuCu4(SO4)2(OH)6·4H2O. Kobyashevite is a devilline-group member. It is named in memory of the Russian mineralogist Yuriy Stepanovich Kobyashev (1935–2009), a specialist on mineralogy of the Urals.  相似文献   

6.
7.
This paper reports on hydrothermal synthesis and crystal structure refinement of dicadmium arsenate hydroxide, Cd2(AsO4)(OH), obtained at 220 °C and autogenous pressure. Its crystal structure is monoclinic, space group P21/a, with a = 13.097(3), b = 14.089(3), c = 10.566(2) Å, β = 108.38(3)°, V = 1850.2(6) Å3 (Z = 16). It is isotypic with the members of the triploidite group of minerals and synthetic compounds, and thus shows a close topological relationship with the triplite group. The complex framework contains edge- and corner-sharing CdO4(OH) and CdO4(OH)2 polyhedra, linked via corner-sharing to AsO4 tetrahedra (average As—O distances range between 1.682 and 1.688 Å). Four five-coordinated Cd sites are at the centers of distorted trigonal bipyramids (average Cd—O distances are between 2.225 and 2.251 Å), whereas the remaining four Cd sites have a distorted octahedral coordination environment (average Cd—O distances are between 2.297 and 2.320 Å). The positions of all the hydrogen atoms were located in a difference-Fourier map and refined with an isotropic displacement parameter. The hydrogen-bonds are weak to very weak. The unusual five-coordination of Cd is briefly discussed in relation to comparable minerals and compounds. Among triploidite-type compounds, Cd2(AsO4)(OH) is the member with the largest unit cell reported so far, and the second known arsenate member.  相似文献   

8.
A new mineral, mariinskite, BeCr2O4, the chromium analog of chrysoberyl, has been found at the Mariinsky (Malyshevo) deposit, the Ural Emerald Mines, the Central Urals, Russia. The mineral is named after its type locality. It was discovered in chromitite in association with fluorphlogopite, Cr-bearing muscovite, eskolaite, and tourmaline. Mariinskite occurs as anhedral grains ranging from 0.01 to 0.3 mm in size; in some cases it forms pseudohexagonal chrysoberyl-type twins. The mineral is dark-green, with a pale green streak; the Mohs’ hardness is 8.5, microhardness VHN = 1725 kg/mm2. D meas = 4.25(2) g/cm3, D calc = 4.25 g/cm3. Microscopically, it is emerald-green, pleochroic from emerald-green (γ) to yellow-green (β) and greenish yellow (α). The new mineral is biaxial (+), γ = 2.15(1), β = 2.09(3), and α = 2.05(1), 2V meas = 80 ± (10)°, 2V calc = 80.5°. In reflected light, it is gray with green reflections; R max (589) = 12.9%; R min (589) = 12.3%, and there are strong, internal green reflections. The strongest absorption bands in the IR spectrum are as follows (cm?1): 935, 700, 614, 534. Space group Pnma, a = 9.727(3), b = 5.619(1), c = 4.499(1) Å, V = 245.9(3) Å3, Z = 4. The strongest reflections in the X-ray powder diffraction pattern are as follows (d Å, I, hkl): 4.08(40)(101), 3.31(90)(111), 2.629(50)(301), 2.434(50)(220), 2.381(40)(311), 2.139(60)(221), 1.651(100)(222). The average chemical composition of mariinskite (electron microprobe, wt %) is as follows: BeO 16.3, Al2O3 23.89, Cr2O3 58.67, Fe2O3 0.26, V2O3 0.26, TiO2 0.61, total is 99.98. The empirical formula, calculated on the basis of four O atoms is Be1.03(Cr1.22Al0.74Ti0.01Fe0.01V0.01)1.99O4. The compatibility index 1 ? (Kp/Kc), 0.019, is excellent. The type specimens are deposited in the Fersman Mineralogical Museum, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, and the Ural Geological Museum, Yekaterinburg, Russia.  相似文献   

9.
《地学前缘(英文版)》2020,11(6):2339-2346
A new cerite group mineral species, taipingite-(Ce), ideally (Ce73+, Ca2)Σ9Mg(SiO4)3[SiO3(OH)]4F3, has been found in the Taipingzhen rare earth element (REE) deposit in the North Qinling Orogen (NQO), Central China. It forms subhedral grains (up to approximately 100 ​μm ​× ​200 ​μm) commonly intergrown with the REE mineral assemblages and is closely associated with allanite-(Ce), gatelite-(Ce), törnebohmite-(Ce), fluocerite-(Ce), fluocerite-(La), fluorite, bastnäsite-(Ce), parisite-(Ce) and calcite. Taipingite-(Ce) is light red to pinkish brown under a binocular microscope and pale brown to colorless in thin section, and it is translucent to transparent with a grayish-white streak and vitreous luster. This mineral is brittle with conchoidal fracture; has a Mohs hardness value of approximately 5½ and exhibits no cleavage twinning or parting. The calculated density is 4.900(5) g/cm3. Optically, taipingite-(Ce) is uniaxial (+), with ω ​= ​1.808(5), ε ​= ​1.812(7), c ​= ​ε, and a ​= ​b ​= ​ω. Furthermore, this mineral is insoluble in HCl, HNO3 and H2SO4. Electron microprobe analysis demonstrated that the sample was relatively pure, yielding the empirical formula (with calculated H2O): (Ce4.02La1.64Nd1.49Pr0.41Sm0.10Gd0.02Ho0.02Tm0.01Lu0.02Y0.03Ca0.66Mg0.05Th0.01–0.51)Σ9(Mg0.75Fe0.253+)Σ1(SiO4)3{[SiO3(OH)]3.98[PO3(OH)]0.02}Σ4(F1.81OH1.17Cl0.02)Σ3. Taipingite-(Ce) is trigonal and exhibits space group symmetry R3c with unit cell parameters a ​= ​10.7246(3) Å, c ​= ​37.9528(14) Å, V ​= ​3780.39(20) Å3 and Z ​= ​6. The strongest eight lines in the X-ray diffraction pattern are [d in Å(I)(hkl)]: 4.518(50)(202), 3.455(95)(122), 3.297(85)(214), 3.098(35)(300), 2.941(100)(02,10), 2.683(65)(220), 1.945(40)(238) and 1.754(40)(30,18). The crystal structure has been refined to a R1 factor of 0.025, calculated for the 2312 unique observed reflections (Fo ​≥ ​4σ). The mineral is named after its discovery locality and is characterized as the F-dominant analogue of cerite-(Ce).  相似文献   

10.
The paper describes the first finding of quintinite [Mg4Al2(OH)12][(CO3)(H2O)3] at the Mariinsky deposit in the Central Urals, Russia. The mineral occurs as white tabular crystals in cavities within altered gabbro in association with prehnite, calcite, and a chlorite-group mineral. Quintinite is the probable result of late hydrothermal alteration of primary mafic and ultramafic rocks hosting emerald-bearing glimmerite. According to electron microprobe data, the Mg: Al ratio is ~2: 1. IR spectroscopy has revealed hydroxyl and carbonate groups and H2O molecules in the mineral. According to single crystal XRD data, quintinite is monoclinic, space group C2/m, a =5.233(1), b = 9.051(2), c = 7.711(2) Å, β = 103.09(3)°, V = 355.7(2) Å3. Based on structure refinement, the polytype of quintinite should be denoted as 1M. This is the third approved occurrence of quintinite-1M in the world after the Kovdor complex and Bazhenovsky chrysotile–asbestos deposit.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Avdoninite, a new mineral species, has been found together with euchlorite, paratacamite, atacamite, belloite, and langbeinite hosted in exhalation sediments of the Yadovitaya fumarole in the Second Cinder Cone at the Northern Breach of the Great Fissure Tolbachik Eruption, Tolbachik volcano, Kamchatka Peninsula, Russia. Avdoninite occurs as imperfect, short prismatic and thick tabular crystals up to 0.2 mm long, with (001) and (100) forms, crystal aggregates, and pseudomorphs (together with atacamite) after melanothallite observed. The new mineral is brittle, with the Mohs hardness 3 (for aggregates). Density is 3.03 g/cm3 (meas.) and 3.066 g/cm3 (calc.). Avdoninite is biaxial and optically neutral, with α = 1.669, β = 1.688, γ = 1.707, 2V = ?90°. Dispersion is not observed. Optical orientation: Y = c, X = b? Pleochroism is absent. The infrared spectrum suggests the presence of water molecules in avdoninite. Electron microprobe chemical analysis has given (wt %) K2O 11.94 (±0.4), CuO 51.43 (±0.7), Cl 37.07 (±0.6), H2O (determined by the Penfield method) 6.9, ?O=Cl2 ?8.37, total 98.97. The empirical formula is K1.96Cu5.00Cl8.09(OH)3.87. · 1.03H2O. Avdoninite is monoclinic, space group P2/m, P2, or Pm; a = 24.34(2) Å, b = 5.878(4) Å, c = 11.626(5) Å, β = 93.3(1)°, V = 1660.6(20) Å3, Z = 4. The compatibility index is good: 1 ? K p/K c = 0.056 for D calc and 0.044 for D meas. The strongest lines in the X-ray powder diffraction pattern (d, Å (I, %) (hkl)) are 11.63(100)(001), 5.88(20)(010), 5.80(27)(002), 5.73(17)(\(\overline 1 \)02), 2.518(19)(21\(\overline 4 \)), 2.321(17)(005). Avdoninite is identical to a technogenic analogue previously described from the Blyava volcanic-hosted massive sulfide deposit, Orenburg oblast, Russia. The new mineral is named after Vladimir Nikolaevich Avdonin (born 1925), a senior researcher of the Ural Geological Museum of the Ural State Mining University. The type material of avdoninite from Kamchatka is deposited in the Mineralogical Museum of the Department of Mineralogy, St. Petersburg State University, St. Petersburg, Russia. The registration number is 19175.  相似文献   

13.
The crystal structure of the rare secondary mineral cualstibite-1M (formerly cyanophyllite), originally reported to have the chemical formula 10CuO·2Al2O3·3Sb2O3·25H2O and orthorhombic symmetry, was solved from single-crystal intensity data (Mo- X-radiation, CCD area detector, 293 K, 2θmax?=?80) collected on a twinned crystal containing very minor Mg. The mineral is monoclinic, P21/c (no. 14), with a?=?9.938(1), b?=?8.890(1), c?=?5.493(1) Å, β?=?102.90(1)°, V?=?473.05(11) Å3; R1(F)?=?0.0326. All crystals investigated turned out to be non-merohedric twins. The atomic arrangement has a distinctly layered character. Brucite-like sheets composed of two [4?+?2]-coordinated (Cu,Al,Mg) sites are linked by weak hydrogen-bonding (O···O?~?2.80 Å) to isolated regular Sb(OH)6 octahedra (<Sb-O>?=?1.975 Å). The layered, pseudotrigonal character explains the perfect cleavage and the proneness to twinning. The Sb site is fully occupied and the two (Cu,Al,Mg) sites have occupancies of Cu0.79Al0.17Mg0.04 and Cu0.72Al0.23Mg0.05. The Cu-richer site shows a slightly stronger Jahn-Teller-distortion. The resulting empirical formula, which necessitates a H2O-for-OH substitution to obtain charge balance, is (Cu2.23Al0.63Mg0.14)(OH)5.63(H2O)0.37[Sb5+(OH)6]. The ideal chemical formula is (Cu,Al)3(OH)6[Sb5+(OH)6], with Cu:Al = 2:1. The structure is closely related to those of trigonal cualstibite-1T [Cu2AlSb(OH)12, P-3, with ordered Cu-Al distribution in the brucite sheets], and its Zn analogue zincalstibite-1T [Zn2AlSb(OH)12]. Cualstibite-1M and cualstibite-1T are polytypes and, together with zincalstibite-1T, zincalstibite-9R and omsite, belong to the cualstibite group within the hydrotalcite supergroup, which comprises all natural members of the large family of layered double hydroxides (LDH).  相似文献   

14.
Attikaite, a new mineral species, has been found together with arsenocrandalite, arsenogoyazite, conichalcite, olivenite, philipsbornite, azurite, malachite, carminite, beudantite, goethite, quartz, and allophane at the Christina Mine No. 132, Kamareza, Lavrion District, Attiki Prefecture (Attika), Greece. The mineral is named after the type locality. It forms spheroidal segregations (up to 0.3 mm in diameter) consisting of thin flexible crystals up to 3 × 20 × 80 μm in size. Its color is light blue to greenish blue, with a pale blue streak. The Mohs’ hardness is 2 to 2.5. The cleavage is eminent mica-like parallel to {001}. The density is 3.2(2) g/cm3 (measured in heavy liquids) and 3.356 g/cm3 (calculated). The wave numbers of the absorption bands in the infrared spectrum of attikaite are (cm?1; sh is shoulder; w is a weak band): 3525sh, 3425, 3180, 1642, 1120w, 1070w, 1035w, 900sh, 874, 833, 820, 690w, 645w, 600sh, 555, 486, 458, and 397. Attikaite is optically biaxial, negative, α = 1.642(2), β = γ = 1.644(2) (X = c) 2V means = 10(8)°, and 2V calc = 0°. The new mineral is microscopically colorless and nonpleochroic. The chemical composition (electron microprobe, average over 4 point analyses, wt %) is: 0.17 MgO, 17.48 CaO, 0.12 FeO, 16.28 CuO, 10.61 Al2O3, 0.89 P2O5, 45.45 As2O5, 1.39 SO3, and H2O (by difference) 7.61, where the total is 100.00. The empirical formula calculated on the basis of (O,OH,H2O)22 is: Ca2.94Cu 1.93 2+ Al1.97Mg0.04Fe 0.02 2+ [(As3.74S0.16P0.12)Σ4.02O16.08](OH)3.87 · 2.05H2 O. The simplified formula is Ca3Cu2Al2(AsO4)4(OH)4 · 2H2O. Attikaite is orthorhombic, space group Pban, Pbam or Pba2; the unit-cell dimensions are a = 10.01(1), b = 8.199(5), c = 22.78(1) Å, V = 1870(3) Å3, and Z = 4. In the result of the ignition of attikaite for 30 to 35 min at 128–140°, the H2O bands in the IR spectrum disappear, while the OH-group band is not modified; the weight loss is 4.3%, which approximately corresponds to two H2O molecules per formula; and parameter c decreases from 22.78 to 18.77 Å. The strongest reflections in the X-ray powder diffraction pattern [d, Å (I, %)((hkl)] are: 22.8(100)(001), 11.36(60)(002), 5.01(90)(200), 3.38(5)(123, 205), 2.780(70)(026), 2.682(30)(126), 2.503(50)(400), 2.292(20)(404). The type material of attikaite is deposited in the Fersman Mineralogical Museum, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow. The registration number is 3435/1.  相似文献   

15.
The new mineral parascandolaite, isotypic to cubic perovskites, space group Pm \(\overline{3}\) m (no. 221) is the natural analog of the synthetic fluoride KMgF3 and is related to neighborite, NaMgF3. It was found as a volcanic sublimate at Vesuvius volcano on 1944 eruption lava scoria, associated with opal, cerussite, mimetite, phoenicochroite and coulsellite. It occurs as transparent colorless to white cubic crystals up to 0.5 mm in length with vitreous luster. The density measured by flotation in a diiodomethane–toluene mixture is 3.11(1) g/cm3; that calculated from the empirical formula and single-crystal X-ray data is 3.123 g/cm3. The mineral is isotropic with n = 1.395(5) (580 nm). The six strongest reflections in the X-ray powder diffraction pattern are: [d obs in Å(I)(h k l)] 2.001(100)(2 0 0), 2.831(83)(1 1 0), 2.311(78)(1 1 1), 1.415(56)(2 2 0), 1.633(35)(2 1 1) and 1.206(22)(3 1 1). The unit-cell parameter is a = 4.0032(9) Å. The structure was refined to a final R(F) = 0.0149 for 35 independent observed reflections [I > 2σ(I)]. The mineral is named after the Italian mineralogist Antonio Parascandola (1902–1977).  相似文献   

16.
Xitieshanite is a new ferric sulfate mineral discovered in the oxidation zone of a Pb-Zn deposit at Xitieshan, Qinghai Province, China. The typical crystal of xitieshanite is a rhombic rectangle. It is bright green in colour with a light yellow tint. Luster vitrous Translucent to almost transparent. Streak yellow. Cleavage imperfect. Fracture uneven or conchoidal. H. (Vickers)=62.6kg/mm2. Specific gravity=1.99obs(2.02calc,) Pleochroism strong, and axial colours: X=colourless to pale yellow, Y=pale yellow, Z=light yellow with greenish tint. It is optically positive, biaxial, 2V=77°,r v. Refractive indices:N x =1.536,N y =1.570,N z =1.628. Extinction parallel and inclined. Elongation positive and negative. X-ray single-crystal study shows it is monoclinic. Space groupP21/a. Unit cell parameters:a=14.102,b=6.908,c=10.673 Å, β=111.266°,V=968.9, Å3,Z=4. The powder pattern of xitieshanite gave the strongest lines: 6.67(6)(201), 6.09(5)(110), 5.69(5)(011), 4.96(10)(002), 4.81(10)(211), 4.21(5)(112), and 3.90(9)(211). Chemical analysis gave Al2O3 0.01, Fe2O3 26.15, FeO 0.18, MgO 0.03, CaO 0.09, K2O 0.03, Na2O 0.07, SO3 27.69, H2O 45.02, total 99.27%, corresponding to the chemical formula: Fe2+ (SO4)(OH) · 7H2O. The DTA curve shows respectively three strong endothermic peaks at 85°, 170°, and 735°C, and a weak peak at 460°C. The TGA curve shows a loss of weight in three different steps. The infrared spectral curve of xitieshanite demonstrates that it has two principal absorption bands at 3,350 and 1,225–1,003 cm?1 and two subordinate bands at 1,620 and 603 cm?1.  相似文献   

17.
The new synthetic phase Mg2Al3O[BO4]2(OH) provisionally named “pseudosinhalite” is optically, chemically, and structurally similar to the mineral sinhalite, MgAl[BO4], isostructural with forsterite. It grows hydrothermally from appropriate bulk compositions in the range 4–40?kbar at temperatures that increase with pressure (~650?→?900?°C), and it breaks down at higher temperatures to sinhalite?+?corundum?+?H2O. At P?≥?20?kbar single-phase products of euhedral twinned crystals could often be obtained. Pseudosinhalite is monoclinic with a?=?7.455 (1) Å, b?=?4.330 (1) Å, c?=?9.825 (2) Å, β?=?110.68 (1)°, and space group P21/c. Crystal structure analysis reveals that pseudosinhalite is also based on hexagonal close packing (hcp) of oxygen atoms with Mg and Al in octahedral and B in tetrahedral coordination. In pseudosinhalite the winged octahedral chains in the plane of hcp are not straight as in sinhalite but have a zigzag, 3-repeat period (Dreierkette), and only 1/10 instead of 1/8 of all tetrahedral sites are filled by boron. Hydrogen is located at a split position between two oxygen atoms O5—O5, which are only 2.550 Å apart and thus generate strong hydrogen bonding. This may be responsible for the absence of an hydroxyl absorption band between 2800?cm?1 and 3500?cm?1 in the powder IR spectrum. The equilibrium breakdown curve of pseudosinhalite to form sinhalite, corundum, and water was determined by bracketing experiments to pass through 10?kbar, 745?°C and 35?kbar, 950?°C, giving a slope of about 8?°C/kbar, similar to dehydration curves of some silicates at high pressure. In nature pseudosinhalite could have been misidentified as sinhalite. A possible appearance, like sinhalite in boron-rich skarns, would require more aluminous bulk compositions than for sinhalite at relatively low temperatures. However, pseudosinhalite might also form as a hydrous alteration product of sinhalite at low temperatures, perhaps in association with szaibelyite, MgBO2(OH).  相似文献   

18.
The paper reports new findings of avdoninite from deposits of active fumaroles in the Second Scoria Cone at the Northern Breach of the Great Fissure Tolbachik Eruption, Tolbachik Volcano, Kamchatka Peninsula, Russia. The crystal structure of the mineral has been determined for the first time, which has allowed reliable determination of its space group and unit cell dimensions, refinement of its formula K2Cu5-Cl8(OH)4 · 2H2O, and correct indexing of its X-ray powder diffraction pattern. Avdoninite is monoclinic, space group P21/c, a = 11.592(2), b = 6.5509(11), c = 11.745(2) Å, β = 91.104(6)°, V = 891.8(3) Å3, Z = 2. The crystal structure of this mineral has been determined on a single crystal R 1 [F > 4σ (F)] = 0.063. It is based on sheets of copper–oxo-chloride complexes [Cu5Cl8(OH)4]2– parallel to (100). The K+ cation and H2O molecules are interlayers.  相似文献   

19.
Two samples of hydroxyl-clinohumite, sample SZ0407B with approximate composition Mg8.674(14)Fe0.374(4)(Si0.99(1)O4)4(OH)2 and sample SZ0411B with composition Mg9(SiO4)4(OH)2, were synthesized at 12 GPa and 1,250 °C coexisting with olivine. Unit-cell parameters determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction are given as follows: a = 4.7525(4) Å, b = 10.2935(12) Å, c = 13.7077(10) Å, α = 100.645(9)°, V = 659.04(9) Å3 for SZ0407B, and a = 4.7518(6) Å, b = 10.2861(12) Å, c = 13.7008(9) Å, α = 100.638(9)°, V = 658.15(9) Å3 for SZ0411B. Single-crystal X-ray intensity data were collected for crystal structure refinements of both samples. Relative to the pure-Mg sample, Fe decreases M3–OH bond lengths by ~0.010(3) Å, consistent with some ferric iron ordering into M3. Raman spectroscopy shows two strong bands in the lattice-mode region at 650 and 690 cm?1 in the Fe-bearing sample, which are not observed in the pure-Mg sample. Spectra in the H2O region show at least five bands, which are deconvolved into seven distinct O–H-stretching modes. Thermal expansion measurements were carried out for both samples from 153 to 787 K by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. The average a-, b-, c-axial and volumetric thermal expansion coefficients (10?6 K?1) are 10.5(1), 12.3(2), 12.5(2) and 34.9(5) for SZ0407B, respectively, and 11.1(1), 12.6(3), 13.7(3), 36.8(6) for SZ0411B, respectively. After heating, the unit-cell parameters were refined again for each sample at ambient condition, and no significant changes were observed, indicating no significant oxidation or dehydration during the experiment. For the DHMS phases along the brucite–forsterite join, linear regression gives a systematic linear decrease in expansivity with increasing density. Further, substitution of ferrous iron into these structures decreases thermal expansivity, making the Fe-bearing varieties slightly stiffer.  相似文献   

20.
Hydroxylborite, a new mineral species, an analogue of fluoborite with OH > F, has been found at the Titovsky deposit (57°41′N, 125°22′E), the Chersky Range, Dogdo Basin, Sakha-Yakutia Republic, Russia. Prismatic crystals of the new mineral are dominated by the {10\(\overline 1 \)0} faces without distinct end forms and reach (1?1.5) × (0.1?0.2) mm in size. Radial aggregates of such crystals occur in the mineralized marble adjacent to the boron ore (suanite-kotoite-ludwigite). Calcite, dolomite, Mg-rich ludwigite, kotoite, szaibelyite, clinohumite, magnetite, serpentine, and chlorite are associated minerals. Hydroxylborite is transparent colorless, with a white streak and vitreous luster. The new mineral is brittle. The Mohs’ hardness is 3.5. The cleavage is imperfect on {0001}. The density measured with equilibration in heavy liquids is 2.89(1) g/cm3; the calculated density is 2.872 g/cm3. The wave numbers of the absorption bands in the IR spectrum of hydroxylborite are (cm?1; sh is shoulder): 3668, 1233, 824, 742, 630sh, 555sh, 450sh, and 407. The new mineral is optically uniaxial, negative, ω = 1.566(1), and ε = 1.531(1). The chemical composition (electron microprobe, H2O measured with the Penfield method, wt %) is 18.43 B2O3, 65.71 MgO, 10.23 F, 9.73 H2O, 4.31-O = F2, where the total is 99.79. The empirical formula calculated on the basis of 6 anions pfu is as follows: Mg3.03B0.98[(OH)2.00F1.00]O3.00. Hydroxylborite is hexagonal, and the space group is P63/m. The unit-cell dimensions are: a = 8.912(8) Å, c = 3.112(4) Å, V = 214.05(26) Å3, and Z = 2. The strongest reflections in the X-ray powder pattern [d, Å (I, %)(hkil)] are: 7.69(52)(01\(\overline 1 \)0), 4.45(82)(11\(\overline 2 \)0), 2.573(65)(03\(\overline 3 \)0), 2.422(100)(02\(\overline 2 \)1), and 2.128(60)(12\(\overline 3 \)1). The compatibility index 1 ? (K p/K c) is 0.038 (excellent) for the calculated density and 0.044 (good) for the measured density. The type material of hydroxylborite is deposited in the Fersman Mineralogical Museum, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow (inventory number 91968) and the Geological Museum of the All-Russia Institute of Mineral Resources, Moscow (inventory number M-1663).  相似文献   

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