Minerals As Advanced Materials, 1 (Sergey V. Krivovichev, 2010) (Geo Pedia) PDF
Minerals As Advanced Materials, 1 (Sergey V. Krivovichev, 2010) (Geo Pedia) PDF
Minerals As Advanced Materials, 1 (Sergey V. Krivovichev, 2010) (Geo Pedia) PDF
Minerals as Advanced
Materials I
Editor
Prof. Dr. Sergey V. Krivovichev
Department of Crystallography, Faculty of Geology
St. Petersburg State University
University Emb. 7/9
St. Petersburg
Russia 199034
[email protected]
ISBN: 978-3-540-77122-7
e-ISBN: 978-3-540-77123-4
Foreword
Contents
vii
viii
Contents
Contents
ix
List of Contributors
Atali A. Agakhanov
Fersman Mineralogical Museum, Moscow, Russia
Thomas Armbruster
Institute of Geological Sciences, Research Group: Mineralogical Crystallography,
University of Bern, Freiestr. 3, CH-3012 Bern, Switzerland, e-mail:
[email protected]
Elena Bonaccorsi
Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Universit`a di Pisa, Via S. Maria 53, 56126
Pisa, Italy
Sergey N. Britvin
Department of Crystallography, Faculty of Geology, St. Petersburg State University,
University Emb. 7/9, St. Petersburg, Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
Igor A. Bryzgalov
Faculty of Geology, Moscow State University, 119991 Moscow, Russia
Rimma S. Bubnova
Institute of Silicate Chemistry of Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg,
Russia, e-mail: Rimma [email protected]
Boris E. Burakov
Laboratory of Applied Mineralogy and Radiogeochemistry, V.G. Khlopin Radium
Institute, 2-nd Site, KIRSI-branch, 1, Roentgen Street, 197101 St. Petersburg,
Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
Peter C. Burns
Department of Civil Engineering and Geological Sciences, University of Notre
Dame, 156 Fitzpatrick Hall, Notre Dame, IN 46556-0767, USA
xi
xii
List of Contributors
Nikita V. Chukanov
Institute of Problems of Chemical Physics Russian Academy of Sciences,
Chernogolovka, Moscow region, Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
Wulf Depmeier
Universitat Kiel, Institut fuer Geowissenschaften, Olshausenstrasse 40, D-24098
Kiel, Germany
Yana V. Domracheva
Laboratory of Applied Mineralogy and Radiogeochemistry, V.G. Khlopin Radium
Institute, 2-nd Site, KIRSI-branch, 1, Roentgen Street, 197101 St. Petersburg,
Russia
Vera N. Ermolaeva
Institute of Geochemistry and Analytical Chemistry, 119991 Moscow, Russia
Giovanni Ferraris
Dipartimento di Scienze Mineralogiche e Petrologiche, Universit`a di Torino
Istituto di Geoscienze e Georisorse, CNR Via Valperga Caluso 35, I-10125
Torino, Italy, e-mail: [email protected]
Stanislav K. Filatov
Department of Crystallography, St. Petersburg State University, St. Petersburg,
Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
Walter Garra
Dipartimento di Chimica e Chimica Industriale, Universit`a di Pisa, Via
Risorgimento 35, 56126 Pisa, Italy
Vladimir M. Garbuzov
Laboratory of Applied Mineralogy and Radiogeochemistry, V.G. Khlopin Radium
Institute, 2-nd Site, KIRSI-branch, 1, Roentgen Street, 197101 St. Petersburg,
Russia
Arina A. Grigorieva
Faculty of Geology, Moscow State University, 119991 Moscow, Russia, e-mail:
[email protected]
Gregory Yu. Ivanyuk
Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences,
Apatity, Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
Alina R. Izatulina
Department of Crystallography, Faculty of Geology, St. Petersburg State University,
University Emb. 7/9, St. Petersburg, Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
Oxana Karimova
Department of Mineralogy, Institute of Geology of Ore Deposits Russian Academy
of Sciences, 35 Staromonetny, 119017 Moscow, Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
List of Contributors
xiii
Alexander P. Khomyakov
Institute of Mineralogy, Geochemistry, and Crystal Chemistry of Rare Elements,
Moscow, Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
Alexander A. Kitsay
Laboratory of Applied Mineralogy and Radiogeochemistry, V.G. Khlopin Radium
Institute, 2-nd Site, KIRSI-branch, 1, Roentgen Street, 197101 St. Petersburg,
Russia
Karsten Knorr
Universitat Kiel, Institut fuer Geowissenschaften, Olshausenstrasse 40, D-24098
Kiel, Germany
Ekaterina V. Kolesnikova
Laboratory of Applied Mineralogy and Radiogeochemistry, V.G. Khlopin Radium
Institute, 2-nd Site, KIRSI-branch, 1, Roentgen Street, 197101 St. Petersburg,
Russia
Vladimir V. Kovalevski
Institute of Geology, Karelian Research Center, Russian Academy of Sciences,
Pushkinskaya St. 11, Petrozavodsk 185610, Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
Sergey V. Krivovichev
Department of Crystallography, Faculty of Geology, St. Petersburg State
University, State University Emb. 7/9, 199034 St. Petersburg, Russia, e-mail:
[email protected]
Maria G. Krzhizhanovskaya
Department of Crystallography, St. Petersburg State University, St. Petersburg,
Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
Tatiana Livshits
Institute of Geology of Ore Deposits, Moscow, Russia
Ekaterina V. Lovskaya
Faculty of Geology, Moscow State University, 119991 Moscow, Russia
Fabio Marchetti
Dipartimento di Chimica e Chimica Industriale, Universit`a di Pisa, Via
Risorgimento 35, 56126 Pisa, Italy
Yurii P. Menshikov
Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences,
Apatity, Russia
Marco Merlini
Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra A. Desio, Universit`a di Milano, Via Botticelli
23, 20133 Milano, Italy
xiv
List of Contributors
Stefano Merlino
Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Universit`a di Pisa, Via S. Maria 53, 56126
Pisa, Italy, e-mail: [email protected]
Larisa D. Nikolaeva
Laboratory of Applied Mineralogy and Radiogeochemistry, V.G. Khlopin Radium
Institute, 2-nd Site, KIRSI-branch, 1, Roentgen Street, 197101 St. Petersburg,
Russia
Lyudmila V. Olysych
Faculty of Geology, Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia, e-mail:
[email protected]
Natalia I. Organova
Institute of Geology of Ore Deposits, Petrology, Mineralogy, Russian Academy of
Scienses, Staromonetny per.35, 109017 Moscow, Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
Yakov A. Pakhomovsky
Geological Institute of the Kola Science Center of the Russian Academy of
Sciences, Apatity 184200, Russia
Igor V. Pekov
Faculty of Geology, Moscow State University, 119991 Moscow, Russia, e-mail:
[email protected]; Institute of Geochemistry and Analytical Chemistry, 119991
Moscow, Russia
Lars Peters
Universitat Kiel, Institut fuer Geowissenschaften, Olshausenstrasse 40, D24098 Kiel, Germany, e-mail: [email protected]; Present address: Chemistry
Department, University of Durham, Durham, UK
Marina A. Petrova
Laboratory of Applied Mineralogy and Radiogeochemistry, V.G. Khlopin Radium
Institute, 2-nd Site, KIRSI-branch, 1, Roentgen Street, 197101 St. Petersburg,
Russia
Dmitrii Yu. Pushcharovsky
Geology Department, Moscow State University, 119992 Moscow, Russia
Nouri-Said Rahmoun
Universitat Kiel, Institut fuer Geowissenschaften, Olshausenstrasse 40, D-24098
Kiel, Germany
Ekaterina A. Selivanova
Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences,
Apatity, Russia
List of Contributors
xv
Zoya V. Shlyukova
Institute of Geology of Ore Deposits, Petrology, Mineralogy, Russian Academy of
Scienses, Staromonetny per.35, 109017 Moscow, Russia
Oleg I. Siidra
Department of Crystallography, St. Petersburg State University, University Emb.
7/9, 199034 St. Petersburg, Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
Darya V. Spiridonova
Department of Crystallography, Faculty of Geology, St. Petersburg State University,
University Emb. 7/9, St. Petersburg, Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
Ivan G. Tananaev
Vernadsky Institute of Geochemistry and Analytical Chemistry, Russian Academy
of Sciences, Moscow, Russia; Frumkin Institute of Physical Chemistry and
Electrochemistry, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia, e-mail:
[email protected]
Yurii L. Voytekhovsky
Geological Institute, Kola Scientic Centre, Russian Academy of Sciences, Apatity,
Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
Maria A. Yagovkina
Laboratory of Applied Mineralogy and Radiogeochemistry, V.G. Khlopin Radium
Institute, 2-nd Site, KIRSI-branch, 1, Roentgen Street, 197101 St. Petersburg,
Russia
Viktor N. Yakovenchuk
Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences,
Apatity 184200, Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
Olga V. Yakubovich
Moscow State Lomonosov University, Moscow, Russia, e-mail:
[email protected]
Vladislav Yu. Yelnikov
Department of Crystallography, Faculty of Geology, St. Petersburg State University,
University Emb. 7/9, St. Petersburg, Russia
Sergey Yudintsev
Institute of Geology of Ore Deposits, Moscow, Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
Maria V. Zamoryanskaya
Laboratory of Applied Mineralogy and Radiogeochemistry, V.G. Khlopin Radium
Institute, 2-nd Site, KIRSI-branch, 1, Roentgen Street, 197101 St. Petersburg,
Russia
Vladimir A. Zirlin
Laboratory of Applied Mineralogy and Radiogeochemistry, V.G. Khlopin Radium
Institute, 2-nd Site, KIRSI-branch, 1, Roentgen Street, 197101 St. Petersburg,
Russia
xvi
List of Contributors
Andrey A. Zolotarev
Department of Crystallography, Faculty of Geology, St. Petersburg State University,
St. Petersburg, Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
Natalia V. Zubkova
Geology Department, Moscow State University, 119992 Moscow, Russia, e-mail:
Nata [email protected]
Introduction
Still 50 years ago natural zeolites mainly from vugs and ssures of volcanic rocks
were considered a rare curiosity of nature. About 100 years ago chemists recognized
that these minerals with a tetrahedral framework structure, characterized by internal
porous space in form of cavities and connecting channels, can be used for ion exchange, molecular sieving, and catalytic reactions. Thus in the 1950s the chemical
industry became engaged in the synthesis of these minerals. The industry aimed for
chabazite but the synthesis failed and instead the most important synthetic zeolite
LTA (Linde Type A) was produced. Simultaneously, geologists discovered huge deposits of natural zeolites mainly in altered volcanic tuffs. Whole mountain ranges
on all continents consist of clinoptilolite, phillipsite, chabazite, and analcime with
zeolite concentrations above 60%. Since this discovery there is a continuous competition between the pure but expensive synthetic products and the dirty but inexpensive natural zeolites. About 3.6 Mio tons of natural zeolites are annually produced.
In contrast, 1.3 Mio tons of synthetic zeolites are annually consumed for detergents, catalysts, desiccation, and separation. Main applications (Armbruster, 2001)
for natural zeolites are as soil conditioner, animal feed addition, ion exchanger for
industrial-, agricultural-, and municipal- wastewater treatment, absorber of Sr and
Cs radioisotopes in the nuclear industry and for clean up of nuclear accidents (Chernobyl), soil replacement (ZEOPONICS) in horticulture and also as cat litter. Even
veterinary and medical applications are under investigation. In general, products
from each natural zeolite deposit have a different favorable application depending
on structure and chemistry of the zeolite. A sodian zeolite is not good for potable
water production or horticultural applications but excellent for ammonia, Cs, Sr, Pb,
Cd exchange in wastewater. A potassian zeolite is favorable for soil amendment
Thomas Armbruster
Institute of Geological Sciences, Research Group: Mineralogical Crystallography, University of
Bern, Freiestr. 3, CH-3012 Bern, Switzerland, e-mail: [email protected]
T. Armbruster
whereas a calcian zeolite is excellent for animal feed addition. The mechanical
properties are of special interest for cat litter applications. Not only the benets
of the porous structure are used. Natural zeolites from altered volcanic tuffs are
ne-crystalline (about 1 m) also responsible for their late discovery and thus
possess a large external surface of high activity. In modern applications such zeolites are surface treated (SMZ: Surface Modied Zeolite) with organic molecules
(e.g. HDTMA) used for retention of harmful anions, cations, and non-polar organics
such as PCEs and benzene in polluted industrial areas.
Natural Zeolites
(2) The disordered Al distribution has direct bearing on the arrangement of the extraframework cations. For charge balance reasons, cations within the cavities
will always nestle close to Al-occupied tetrahedral framework sites leading to
distributional cation disorder within the open cavity space. The situation becomes even more complex if two or more different types of cations have to be
considered as cavity or channel occupants.
(3) Two types of H2 O molecules in the structural channels can be distinguished:
(a) H2 O molecules coordinating the extraframework cations and (b) spacelling H2 O molecules bonded by hydrogen bonds to the cavity surface. The
H2 O space-llers are not coordinated to cations. Both types of H2 O molecules
will be disordered following the distribution pattern of the cations.
T. Armbruster
outer crystal surface. In addition, conventional X-ray single crystal experiments are
blind for surface effects. Thus we clearly limit our experiment to the bulk of the
crystal.
Natural Zeolites
Other trend-setting results (Gunter et al., 1994; Yang and Armbruster, 1996; Dobelin
and Armbruster, 2003) were derived from structural analyses of heulandites with
only one type of heavy element (e.g., Cd2+ , Pb2+ , Cs+ ). In case of heulandite
Cd2+ the diffraction pattern clearly revealed additional diffuse features associated
with intensity modulation along the streaks. This is interpreted in terms of some
correlated long-range Cd order among adjacent cavities. Such effects can only be
seen for heavy elements increasing the sensitivity of the diffraction experiments for
extraframework sites. In case of Cd- and Pb-exchanged heulandite the corresponding structure was found to be acenteric, space group Cm and not centro-symmetric
C2/m as generally assumed for heulandite. Due to the relative high anomalous dispersion behavior of Cd and Pb for Mo-X-radiation, acentricity of the structure becomes obvious, which is obscured for heulandite with light elements (Na, Mg, K,
Ca) as channel occupants. These results indicate that Al substitution in the tetrahedral framework and associated extraframework cation substitution is not as disordered as originally assumed.
Conclusions
Natural zeolites are applied for their highly active outer surface and their porous
bulk structure. For many technical applications it remains dubious, which of these
properties is dominant. Due to its periodicity the bulk structure may easily be investigated. However, even diffraction experiments with well-chosen procedures and
conditions indicate that detailed knowledge of the true structure of zeolites, in particular of the clinoptilolite- heulandite group, is very limited. Our diffraction experiments gave qualitative evidence that long- and short range Si, Al disorder and
associated extraframework cation disorder is not as random as originally believed.
However, the question whether Al tetrahedra occur correlated, e.g. enriched around
certain cavities but depleted around others, is fundamental for understanding selectivity behavior of clinoptiloliteheulandite.
References
Alberti A (1972) On the crystal structure of the zeolite heulandite. Mineral Petrol 18:129146
Armbruster T (1993) Dehydration mechanism of clinoptilolite and heulandite: single-crystal X-ray
study of Na-poor, Ca-, K-, Mg-rich clinoptilolite at 100 K. Am Mineral 78:260264
Armbruster T (2001) Clinoptiloliteheulandite: applications and basic research. In: Galarnau A, Di
Renzo F, Faujula F, Vedrine J (eds) Studies in surface science and catalysis, vol 135. Zeolites
and Mesoporous Materials at the Dawn of the 21st Century. Elsevier Science BV, Amsterdam,
pp 1327
Armbruster T, Gunter ME (1991) Stepwise dehydration of heulandite-clinoptilolite from Succor
Creek, Oregon, USA: a single-crystal X-ray study at 100 K. Am Mineral 76:18721883
Coombs DS, Alberti A, Armbruster T, Artioli G, Colella C, Galli E, Grice JD, Liebau F, Minato H,
Nickel EH, Passaglia E, Peacor DR, Quartieri S, Rinaldi R, Ross M, Sheppard RA, Tillmanns E,
T. Armbruster
Vezzalini G (1997) Recommended nomenclature for zeolite minerals: report of the subcommittee on zeolites of the International Mineralogical Association, Commission on New Minerals
and Mineral Names. Can Mineral 35:15711606
Dobelin N, Armbruster T (2003) Stepwise dehydration and change of framework topology in Cdexchanges heulandite. Micropor Mesopor Mat 61:85103
Eisenman J (1962) Cation selective glass electrodes and their mode of operation. Biophys J Suppl
2:259323
Gunter ME, Armbruster T, Kohler T, Knowles ChR (1994) Crystal structure and optical properties
of Na- and Pb-exchanged heulandite-group zeolites. Am Mineral 79:675682
Sherry HS (1969) The ion exchange properties of a zeolites. In: Marinsky JA (ed) Ion exchange, a
series of advances, vol 2. Marcel Dekker, New York, pp 89133
Yang P, Armbruster T (1996) Na, K, Rb, and Cs exchange in heulandite single-crystals: X-ray
structure renements at 100 K. J Solid State Chem 123:140149
Yang P, Stolz J, Armbruster T, Gunter ME (1997) Na, K. Rb, and Cs exchange in heulandite single
crystals: diffusion kinetics. Am Mineral 82:517525
Introduction
The ion exchange phenomenon is well-known for crystalline materials including
minerals. It has been conrmed experimentally that many microporous minerals
representing different chemical classes are capable of cation exchange with salt
solutions, including dilute ones, even under room conditions. No doubt that microporous minerals show ion-exchange properties also in nature. Numerous works
are devoted to the experimental study and practical use of ion-exchange properties
of minerals, especially microporous aluminosilicates (zeolites, clay minerals, etc.),
whereas reactions and products of natural ion exchange were almost non-studied to
recent time.
Russia,
e-mail:
Arina A. Grigorieva
Faculty of Geology, Moscow State University, 119991 Moscow, Russia
Anna G. Turchkova
Faculty of Geology, Moscow State University, 119991 Moscow, Russia
Ekaterina V. Lovskaya
Faculty of Geology, Moscow State University, 119991 Moscow, Russia
(essentially covalent, forming stable structure fragments) and weak (ionic, hydrogen) chemical bonds take place together. Steric factor plays also an important role:
if the exchangeable ion is located in open cage or wide channel then is favourable
for exchange but if it is situated in isolated cage with small windows that exchange
can be difcult or impossible.
More than 500 minerals including many widespread species have the structure
features making the ion exchange possible. They are characterized by framework,
layer or tubular stable structure fragments. Minerals with wide channels show strong
ion-exchange properties even under room conditions: there are, in particular, widepore aluminosilicate zeolites, silicates with low-dense heteropolyhedral frameworks
(consisting of the Si tetrahedra and the octahedra centered by atoms of Zr, Ti, Nb
and other transition elements: Chukanov & Pekov, 2005), smectites, vermiculite,
pyrochlores and layered suldes with large atoms. The second group (ion exchange
at 60300 C) includes narrow-pore zeolites, feldspathoids of the cancrinite and sodalite groups, majority of silicates with heteropolyhedral frameworks, etc. Under the
temperature 400 C, feldspars, nepheline, micas, apatites and some other minerals
become ion-exchangers (Barrer, 1962; Chelishchev, 1973; Breck, 1974; our data).
From the structure features, strong ion-exchange capacity can be predicted for natural zeolite-like borates, beryllophosphates, uranium micas, tobermorite-like silicates, suldes and Mn oxides with tunnel structures and some other minerals.
Ion-exchange transformations, including ones in nature, can be considered as
special case of a metasomatism. The main distinctive feature of ion exchange from
classic metasomatic reactions is as follows: a crystal has not undergo strong
changes in the energetic (only weak chemical bonds break with further formation of
new such bonds), structural-geometric (no changes of stable structure fragment or
its insignicant deformations), space and morphological (volume and morphology
of a crystal remain or change very slightly) aspects.
We examine a problem of natural ion exchange on macroscopic (0.1 mm)
crystals of microporous minerals mainly from peralkaline rocks and granitic pegmatites. Smectites and other ne-grained minerals were not involved for two reasons: (1) it is very difcult to divide the phenomena of ion exchange and surface
sorption; (2) study of inner structure of so tiny individuals are very difcult.
Peralkaline rocks seem one of the best objects for study of the natural ion
exchange phenomenon. They contain the most diversity of microporous minerals, rstly zeolites (Pekov et al., 2004) and zeolite-like Ti-, Nb- and Zr-silicates
(Pekov & Chukanov, 2005). Some of these minerals are unstable: we can observe
both initial and replacing secondary phases (the latters typically with relics of the
formers) and alteration processes can be easily modelled in laboratory.
In accordance with numerous experimental data and the theory of clathrate
formation (Belov, 1976; Barrer, 1982), zeolites and zeolite-like compounds can
crystallize in their full-cationic forms only. In peralkaline rocks, such forms are minerals saturated by Na or/and K. Alkali-depleted microporous crystals enriched by
cations with higher valency (Ca, Sr, Ba, Pb, U, etc.) have been considered by us
as the products of the ion-exchange reactions with late hydrothermal or/and supergene low-alkaline solutions. Direct exchange cation-for-cation: nA+ An + +
(n1), or nA+ An + +(n1)H2 O, is not excluded. However the well-known
from experimental data for aqueous solutions (Donnay et al., 1959; Zhdanov &
Egorova, 1968; Breck, 1974) way including the intermediate stage: A+ H+ , or
A+ (H3 O)+ , with further exchange of cations H+ or (H3 O)+ to other metal
cations: nH+ An + + (n1), or n(H3 O)+ An + + (n1)H2 O, seems more
probable. For non-aluminosilicate minerals, a protonation of bridge oxygen atoms
and, correspondingly, the formation of stable hydroxyl-bearing modications with
deciency of exchangeable metal cations is typical: nA+ + O2 + (OH) ; in
some cases, hydrous forms result: nA+ + O2 H2 O + (OH) .
10
so enriched by them. It may be caused by the capillar effect. In some samples the
maximum content of exchanged ions marks margins between concentric growing
zones of a crystal imitating a rhytmic growing zonation. Chamber distribution of
ion-exchanged areas not connected with macroscopic defects in a crystal is not rare.
If the ion-exchange equilibrium is attained in all space of a crystal and exchanged
ions are evenly distributed in it (or their distribution is in concordance with a primary zonation) then the problem to determine: is this crystal ion-exchanged or no?
is generally unsolvable. For evidence that ion exchange really took place, it is necessary to nd a crystal in which this process was interrupted before the ion-exchange
equilibrium attainment in all its space. Thus, it would be chemically heterogeneous
crystal containing both areas which could be considered as (1) ion-exchanged and
(2) relics of initial or relatively slightly altered phase.
Thus, there are the topochemical signs which seem only direct evidence that a
crystal has undergone ion exchange.
Several other signs could be used as indirect evidences.
Geochemical signs: if a microporous mineral occurs in the mineral assemblage
indicating the physico-chemical conditions under which it (or its hypothetic protophase) can not be formed (examples: pyrochlores or titanosilicates together with
supergene minerals; zirconosilicates associated with only alkali-free minerals). Location of probable source of exchanged ions close to the crystal for which an ion
exchange has been supposed seems convincing geochemical sign.
Presence of signicant amount of weakly bonded cations H+ or/and hydronium,
(H3 O)+ , in a microporous mineral can be considered as the chemical sign: it is
typical for the intermediate stage of the cation-exchange process.
High disorder of extra-framework cations and anions (and water molecules, if
they are present) is, in some cases, crystallochemical sign of interrupted ion exchange.
Note that in nature an ion-exchange process can be interrupted by different ways.
Examples are: (1) withdraval of the electrolyte from the system: solution or gas
leaving, melt hardening, insulation of a crystal from electrolyte; (2) temperature
decrease; (3) pressure increase; (4) decrease of concentration of exchangeable ions
in the electrolyte to the ion-exchange equilibrium constant K = 1.
11
12
13
14
alkali-rich minerals with dense structures (natrosilite, fenaksite, phosinaite, etc.) disappear being replaced by phases with different structure types.
It is important to take into account natural ion exchange working on some geological tasks.
Reconstruction of geochemical history. The ion exchange properties of minerals
give a unique possibility of knowing the chemistry of the latest residual solutions
that did not produce their own minerals. For example, the cation composition of late
wide-pore zeolites show that residual solutions in Kola alkaline complexes were rich
of K (and, less, Ca), unlike Mont Saint-Hilaire (Quebec, Canada) and Ilmaussaq
(Greenland) where they were Na-rich (Pekov et al., 2004).
Study of mineral equilibria. When a mineral equilibrium is in study (including the geothermometry and geobarometry) that chemical compositions of involved
minerals are the most important. If some of the minerals are potential ion exchangers
then it can not be excluded that their composition can be distorted.
Study of liquid and gas inclusions. If a crystal containing liquid and/or gas inclusions is potential ion exchanger then the temperature evolution of the system can
provoke the ion exchange between the inclusion and host crystal. In this case, composition of the liquid (gas) phase of the inclusion is determined by the ion-exchange
equilibrium at last stage of the exchange process.
Isotope geology (geochronology, determination of source of matter, etc.). Many
methods in geology are based on the measurements of isotope concentrations. Some
of these methods use elements forming exchangeable ions. In geochronology, there
are K, Rb, Sr, U, Th and Pb; for the determination of source of matter, isotopes of
O, S and some other elements are in use. In mineral ionites, the distortion of the
composition by natural ion exchange processes seems very probable.
Acknowledgements We are grateful to N.N. Kononkova, I.A. Bryzgalov, E.V. Guseva and
N.N. Korotaeva for their help in SEM and electron probe study of our samples and N.V. Chukanov
for discussion. This work was supported by grants of President of Russian Federation MD7230.2006.5, NSh-4964.2006.5 and NSh-4818.2006.5, grant RFBR 06-05-90626-BNTS a and
grant of Russian Science Support Foundation (for IVP).
References
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Barrer RM (1982) Hydrothermal Chemistry of Zeolites. Academic Press, London
Belov NV (1976) Ocherki po Strukturnoy Mineralogii (Essays on Structural Mineralogy). Nedra
Publishing, Moscow (in Russian)
Belyaevskaya GP, Borutskiy BE, Marsiy IM, Vlasova EV, Sivtsov AV, Golovanova TI, Vishnev AI
(1991) Potassium-calcium gaidonnayite, (Ca,Na,K)2x ZrSi3 O9 nH2 O, a new mineral variety
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Breck DW (1974) Zeolites Molecular Sieves: Structure, Chemistry and Use. John Wiley & Sons,
New York
Britvin SN, Guo YS, Kolomenskiy VD, Boldyreva MM, Kretser YuL, Yagovkina MA (2001)
Cronusite, Ca0.2 (H2 O)2 CrS2 , a new mineral from the Norton County enstatite achondrite.
Zapiski VMO 3:2936 (in Russian)
15
Chelishchev NF (1973) Ionoobmennye Svoystva Mineralov: (Ion-Exchange Properties of Minerals). Nauka Publishing, Moscow (in Russian)
Chernitsova NM, Pudovkina ZV, Voronkov AA, Kapustin YuL, Pyatenko YuA (1975) On a new
lovozerite crystallochemical family. Zapiski VMO 1:1827 (in Russian)
Chukanov NV, Pekov IV (2005) Heterosilicates with tetrahedral-octahedral frameworks: mineralogical and crystal-chemical aspects. Rev Miner Geochem 57:105143
Donnay G, Wyart J, Sabatier G (1959) Structural mechanism of thermal and compositional transformations in silicates. Z Kristallogr 112:161168
Khomyakov AP (1995) Mineralogy of Hyperagpaitic Alkaline Rocks. Clarendon Press, Oxford
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elements: minerogenetic aspects. Rev Mineral Geochem 57:145171
Pekov IV, Turchkova AG, Lovskaya EV, Chukanov NV (2004) Tseolity Shchelochnykh Massivov
(Zeolites of Alkaline Massifs). Ekost, Moscow (in Russian)
Pushcharovsky DYu, Pekov IV, Pasero M, Gobechiya ER, Merlino S, Zubkova NV (2002) Crystal
structure of cation-decient calciohilairite and probable decationization mechanisms in minerals with mixed frameworks. Kristallograya 47(5):814818 (in Russian)
Zhdanov SP, Egorova EN (1968) Khimiya Tseolitov (Chemistry of Zeolites). Nauka Publishing,
Leningrad (in Russian)
Microporous structures not only continue to raise great scientic interest, but, in
addition, several representatives bear high technical importance and have commercial value as functional materials. Their functionality depends on both, particular
features of their structure and their actual chemical composition. Many microporous structure types with a wide variety of chemical compositions are currently known, and new ones are discovered in short intervals, see (Baerlocher and
McCusker, http://www.izastructure.org/databases/). Various experimental parameters are at the disposal of the experimentalist when he attempts to nd synthesis
methods for the preparation of materials with new topological or geometrical features, e.g. heteropolyhedral topology, larger pores, wider rings, . . . or having superior physical or chemical properties. An obvious strategy to follow is variation of the
chemical composition. A particular case which is in the focus of the present contribution is constituted by the aluminosilicate frameworks, i.e. three-dimensional
frameworks built from cornerconnected [SiO4 ] and [AlO4 ]tetrahedra. The development in this eld has been given impetus by real technical demands. Many
natural, and also many as-synthesized, aluminosilicate zeolites have a Si:Al ratio
close to 1. However, one of the most important technical applications of zeolites is
their use as catalysts in crude oil rening. The underlying chemical processes necessitate high degrees of thermal stability, hydrophobicity and resistivity to low pH.
Lars Peters
Universitat Kiel, Institut fuer Geowissenschaften, Olshausenstrasse 40, D-24098 Kiel, Germany,
e-mail: [email protected]
Present address: Chemistry Department, University of Durham, Durham, UK
Nouri-Said Rahmoun,
Universitat Kiel, Institut fuer Geowissenschaften, Olshausenstrasse 40, D-24098 Kiel, Germany
Karsten Knorr
Universitat Kiel, Institut fuer Geowissenschaften, Olshausenstrasse 40, D-24098 Kiel, Germany
Wulf Depmeier
Universitat Kiel, Institut fuer Geowissenschaften, Olshausenstrasse 40, D-24098 Kiel, Germany
17
18
L. Peters et al.
This can be achieved by pushing the Si:Al ratio to values much higher than 1.0, up
to the compositions of highly siliceous or even pure silica zeolites.
Striking the opposite path, i.e. decreasing the Si:Al ratio below 1.0, has only
rarely been considered, most probably for the following two reasons:
(i) an alleged uselessness of such lowSi/highAl microporous materials for practical applications,
(ii) a widely believed doctrine in the community that Si:Al ratios beyond 1.0 were
forbidden, because of Loewensteins rule (Loewenstein, 1954).
We consider both objections as arguable. Ad (i): One can conceive of possible
applications. For example, each Al-atom substituting for Si, requires the addition
of a positive charge to the structure in order to maintain charge balance. Usually,
this happens by incorporation of extra cations into the pores of the microporous
framework. Therefore, the capacity of an aluminosilicate zeolite to incorporate guest
cations will increase with its Al content, provided the pores are sufciently large and
also accessible. Such materials could be of interest for absorbing, and thus rendering
harmless, dangerous volatile radioactive species, like 137 Cs and 90 Sr. Other possible
applications of Al-rich microporous materials include gas storage, or rely on the
inclusion of species having a particular property or function, e.g. if they carry a
magnetic moment or an electric dipole, or act as a luminophore. Thus, despite the
fact that superaluminous microporous materials most probably would not be very
useful for the established petrochemical processes, this does not necessarily imply
that such materials would lack any potential in other elds of technical application.
Even the diminishing hydrophobicity could be turned into an asset, if applications
based on the hydrophilic character of superaluminous microporous compounds were
found.
Ad (ii): Loewensteins rule was rst formulated more than fty years ago
(Loewenstein, 1954). Since then, it has developed into a popular rationale used in
the crystal chemistry of aluminosilicates in general, and of zeolites in particular.
Several recent publications deal with various experimental and theoretical aspects
of this rule and bear witness to its ongoing scientic interest, see e.g. (Bosenick
et al., 2001) and literature cited therein. Loewenstein (1954) claimed that whenever
two tetrahedra are linked by an oxygen bridge, the center of only one of them can be
occupied by aluminium; the other center must be occupied by silicon. . . and . . . ,
whenever two aluminium ions are neighbours to the same oxygen anion, at least one
of them must have a coordination number larger than four, . . . . He goes on: These
rules explain the maximum substitution of 50% of the silicon in threedimensional
frameworks and plane networks .. and For 50% substitution, rigorous alternation
between silicon and aluminium tetrahedra becomes necessary; . . . . Loewenstein
based his arguments on the crystal chemical particularities of the Al3+ cation compared with Si4+ ; this is why Loewensteins rule is also known as aluminium avoidance rule. Loewenstein had to build his empirical nding on the rather small set
of structural data which was at his disposal at that time. Since then, the number
of known aluminosilicate structures has increased enormously, and the progress of
experimental techniques and theory allows more well-founded statements on the
19
20
L. Peters et al.
(Sahl and Chatterjee, 1977; Gupta and Chatterjee, 1978; Sahl, 1980). In contrast
to gehlenite, Al and Si occupy the same topological position. Since Al:Si > 1.0,
and Al and Si are statistically distributed (Winkler et al., 2004), the formation of
AlOAl linkages is unavoidable. Hence, both claims of Loewensteinss rule are
violated in this compound. A similar situation is found for the synthetic compound
|Dy4 (MoO4 )2 |[Al8 Si4 O24 ]SOD (Roth et al., 1989), and its relatives. From this and
from our previous experience with aluminate sodalites, e.g. |Ca8 (WO4 )2 |[Al12 O24 ]
SOD (Depmeier, 1988a) we were fully convinced that Loewensteins rule, while
being by and large obeyed, cannot claim generality, in particular not with respect
to the alleged maximum value of 1.0 for Al:Si. We therefore decided to attempt the
synthesis of members of the sodalite family having variable Al:Si ratios > 1. The
general idea was to use the coupled substitution (Ca2+ + Si4+ ) (Ln3+ + Al3+ ) to
prepare members of the sodalite family that are richer in Al than bicchulite, i.e.
Al:Si > 2; Ln3+ representing rare earth cations. If successful, the existence of such
compounds would also indicate that the conspicuous 2:1 Al/Si ratio in the abovementioned bicchulite and |Dy4 (MoO4 )2 |[Al8 Si4 O24 ]SOD does not represent a hypothetical isolated island of extraordinary stability in the composition range 1
Al/Si . A direct synthesis of the envisaged sodalites was not successful. Instead,
a two-step procedure had to be developed. The rst step consisted of the preparation of superaluminous melilite-type compounds (Lnx Ca2x )Al[Al1+x Si1x O7 ],
0 x 1. Ln = La3+ , Eu3+ and Er3+ , were used, and x was varied in steps of
x = 0.125. The products were single-phased; their structures were successfully
Rietveld-rened (Rietveld, 1967) in space group P-421 m with disordered Al and Si
in the so-called double tetrahedra. Figure 1 illustrates the lattice parameters of the
melilite-type compounds as a function of x.
Note the non-uniform deviations from Vegards rule (Vegard and Dale, 1928) for
the different Ln3+ cations. By the successful synthesis of the Al-rich melilites with
x > 0 in the above formula the systematic violation of Loewensteins rule in the
melilite structure type has been documented.
The sodalite-type compounds |Eux Ca8x (OH)8 |[Al8+x Si4x O24 ]SOD could be
obtained from the corresponding Eu-containing melilites Eux Ca2x Al[Al1+x
Si1x O7 ], with x = 0.125, by hydrothermal treatment (T = 810 (x < 0.5), T = 910 K
(0.5 x 1.0), pH2O = 0.1 GPa, run time up to 1000 h). The procedure was inspired
by the preparation of bicchulite from gehlenite (Gupta and Chatterjee, 1978). The
sodalites obtained were successfully Rietveldrened in space group I43m, with
both, disordered Al/Si and Ca/Eu. Figure 2 shows the normalized lattice parameter
of the Eu-bearing sodalites as a function of the composition.
For a full discussion of structural details the reader is referred to the literature
(Peters, 2005; Peters et al., 2006a,b). In short, the results of our studies can be summarized as follows. Loewensteins rule can be broken systematically and continuously in the melilite- and sodalite-type structures via coupled substitutions of (Al3+
+ Ln3+ ) for (Si4+ + Ca2+ ). In both structure types the substitution of Al3+ for
Si4+ results in a similar extension of the average T O-bond length. The observed
linear dependence of the T O-bond length on the Al molar fraction follows exactly Jones (1968) extrapolation from aluminosilicates in the compositional range
allowed by Loewensteins rule, see Fig. 3. This behaviour lends support to our
21
Ln =
La
7.800
7.780
a /
7.760
7.740
Eu
7.720
7.700
Er
7.680
7.660
0.000
0.125
0.250
0.375
0.500
x
0.625
0.750
0.875
1.000
Ln =
5.170
La
c /
5.130
5.110
5.090
Eu
5.070
5.050
5.030
0.000
Er
0.125
0.250
0.375
0.500
x
0.625
0.750
0.875
1.000
Fig. 1 Change of the tetragonal lattice parameters a and c of the melilite-type solid solution
Lnx Ca2x Al[Al1+x Si1x O7 ] with Ln = La (squares), Eu (diamonds) and Er (triangles). Bold lines
correspond to polynomial ts, while thin lines represent a behaviour corresponding to Vegards
rule. The error bars of the relative changes are smaller than the symbols used
22
L. Peters et al.
8.900
8.890
8.880
a /
8.870
8.860
8.850
8.840
8.830
8.820
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
x
2.5
3.0
3.5
4.0
Fig. 2 Relative change of the cubic lattice parameter a of the Eubearing sodalite-type solid solution. The bold line corresponds to a linear t. The error bars of the relative changes are smaller
than the symbols used
T O/
1.74
1.70
1.66
1.62
1.58
0.0
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.7
0.8
0.9
1.0
Fig. 3 Mean TO bond lengths for superaluminous melilites Lnx Ca2x Al[Al1+x Si1x O7 ] (open
squares), superaluminous sodalites |Eux Ca8x (OH)8 |[Al8+x Si4x O24 ]SOD (lled diamonds) as a
function of the Al molar fraction. Their behaviour extrapolates linearly from that of aluminosilicates with Al Si (lled circles, after Jones, 1968). The thick line corresponds to Jones linear t,
thin lines indicate the error margin to Jones t
23
contrasts with the behaviour of aluminosilicates with Al/Si 1, where one normally
observes decreasing thermal stability with increasing Al-content.
Admittedly, our present results concerning the sodalite structure type are conned on species with 2.0 < Al/Si and bicchulite type materials, i.e. containing
hetero-cubane-like M4 (OH)4 polyhedra (M = Ca2+ , Eu3+ ) in the sodalite cages. It
remains to be shown that other cage contents are also compatible with frameworks
violating Loewensteins rule. In particular, such sodalites should be prepared and
investigated which contain tetrahedral cage anions, as such materials seem to be
prone to interesting ferroic phase transitions (Depmeier, 1988b). Another presently
unresolved issue is the range 1.0 < Al/Si < 2.0. This range is currently the subject
of synthetic work.
Finally, we would like to briey comment on the question raised in the title and
on the possibility to synthesize superaluminous real zeolites. The melilite-type, as
well as the sodalite-type are well-known for both, their chemical and conformational
exibility. Of course, both are related with each other. The high conformational
exibility has been demonstrated by the occurrence of at least one rigid-unit-mode
(RUM) for each wave-vector k in the fresnoite structure type (Hoche, 2004) (the
structure of fresnoite is closely related with the melilite-structure), and in the sodalite structure type (Dove et al., 1995). Rigid unit modes have very low or vanishing frequency, thus, the energy, which is needed for a conformational distortion of
the underlying structure is minimal or zero. This leads us to conclude that in both
structural families local lattice deformations, which are caused by substitution, are
released on a very short length scale via RUMs. Our results suggest that the existence of a large number of RUMs qualify a given aluminosilicate as candidate for
systematic and continuous violations of Loewensteins rule. Thus, in order to nd
real zeolites with Al/Si > 1.0, it seems to be a good strategy to look for candidates
with very exible frameworks, suitable candidates being natrolite (Meier, 1960) or
zeolite Rho (McCusker and Baerlocher, 1984).
In a review of the exibilities of aluminosilicate tectosilicates Baur (1992, 1995)
has shown that highly exible frameworks are less common than inexible ones. We
note that the most frequent minerals of the Earths crust, viz. feldspars, belong to the
inexible framework types. According to the arguments given above, one should not
be too much surprised that feldspars obey Loewensteins rule, i.e. superaluminous
feldspars should not exist.
Acknowledgements Financial support by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft under contract
number De 412/27-1,2 and DE 412/31-1 is gratefully acknowledged.
References
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Depmeier W (1988a) Structure of cubic aluminate sodalite Ca8 [Al12 O24 ](WO4 ) in comparison with its orthorhombic phase and with cubic Sr8 [Al12 O24 ](CrO4 ). Acta Crystallogr B44:
204207
Depmeier W (1988b) Aluminate SodalitesA family with strained structures and ferroic phase
transitions. Phys Chem Miner 15:419426
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59:629639
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Acta Crystallogr B 24:355358
Loewenstein W (1954) The distribution of aluminium in the tetrahedra of silicates and aluminates.
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and the related aluminates LnCaAl[Al2 O7 ] with Ln = Tb, Sm. Phys Chem Miner 32:460465
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632:301306
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solid solution series of sodalite-type |(Eux Ca2x )4 (OH)8 |[(Al2+x Si1x )4 O24 ]SOD with x =
0.125, determined by X-ray powder diffraction and 27 Al MAS NMR spectroscopy. Z Kristallogr 221:643648
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25
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and bicchulite. Mineral Mag 68:819824
Introduction
In 1990, Chapman and Roe prepared a number of titanosilicate analogues of
pharmacosiderite, including Cs, Rb and exchanged protonated phases. Harrison
et al. (1995) reported structure of Cs3 H[Ti4 O4 (SiO4 )3 ](H2 O)4 . Behrens et al. (1996),
Behrens and Cleareld (1997) and Dadachov and Harrison (1997) provided data on
preparation, structures and properties of A3 H[Ti4 O4 (SiO4 )3 ](H2 O)n (A = H, Na, K,
Cs). Structures and ion-exchanged properties of HA3 [M4 O4 (XO4 )3 ](H2 O)4 (A = K,
Rb, Cs; M = Ti, Ge; X = Si, Ge) were reported by Behrens et al. (1998). These compounds were considered as perspective materials for the selective removal of Cs
and Sr from wastewater solutions. However, no natural titanosilicates with pharmacosiderite topology have been reported so far. In this article, we report for the rst
time occurrence of four pharmacosiderite-type titanosilicates in Nature and their
cation-exchange properties.
Viktor N. Yakovenchuk,
Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Apatity, Russia,
e-mail: [email protected]
Ekaterina A. Selivanova,
Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Apatity, Russia
Gregory Yu. Ivanyuk,
Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Apatity, Russia
Yakov A. Pakhomovsky,
Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Apatity, Russia
Darya V. Spiridonova
Department of Crystallography, Faculty of Geology, St. Petersburg State University, University
Emb. 7/9, St. Petersburg, Russia
Sergey V. Krivovichev
Department of Crystallography, Faculty of Geology, St. Petersburg State University, University
Emb. 7/9, St. Petersburg, Russia
27
28
29
Experimental
In our experiments separate crystals of phase-1 were loaded in 1M solutions of
NH4 Cl, CsCl, RbCl, CuSO4 , SrCl2 ,and Clerichi liquid at ambient temperature during 1248 h. The chemical composition of original and treated crystals (Table 1) has
been studied by wave-length dispersion spectrometry using a Cameca MS-46 electron microprobe (Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy
of Sciences, Apatity) operating at 20 kV and 2030 nA. The following standards
were used: lorenzenite (Na, Ti), pyrope (Mg, Al), diopside (Si, Ca), wadeite (K),
synthetic MnCO3 (Mn), hematite (Fe), celestine (Sr), metallic niobium (Nb), barite
(Ba), lepidolite (Ru), pollucite (Cs) and atacamite (Cl). Water content was calculated
as 100 wt.% minus SUM of oxides of analyzed elements.
Examination of polished sections of treated crystals made using Leo-1450 scanning electron microscope with Rontec EDS-analyzer. The powder X-ray-diffraction
patterns of treated crystals were obtained by means of the URS1 instrument operated at 40 kV and 30 mA with a 114.7 mm DebyeScherrer camera and FeK
radiation.
It was established that in aqueous solutions of NH4 Cl, CsCl, RbCl, CuSO4 and
Clerichi liquid phase-1 easily looses excessive Na and transforms into more stable
cubic phase-2, whereas in solution of SrCl2 crystal structure of the phase-1 remains
30
Table 1 Chemical composition (wt.%) and unit formula (apfu, Si+Al = 3) of phase-1 treated with
solutions of Clerichi liquid, CsCl, RbCl and SrCl2 at ambient temperature during 48 h
Original
Treated with
Clerichi
CsCl
RbCl
RbCl+CsCl
CuSO4
Na2 O
Al2 O3
SiO2
K2 O
CaO
TiO2
MnO
FeO
CuO
Rb2 O
Nb2 O5
Cs2 O
BaO
Tl2 O
7.12
0.12
23.34
5.96
0.08
39.48
0.43
0.13
14.36
0.28
24.08
0.08
0.34
0.39
22.45
1.63
0.21
32.24
0.41
0.84
22.65
0.16
0.11
34.26
0.36
0.99
20.15
1.88
0.15
33.07
0.38
2.53
0.23
2.11
56.22
3.83
37.71
29.09
3.81
10.78
3.19
19.58
0.10
25.20
3.36
41.56
0.55
1.58
4.14
SUM
H2 O=100-SUM
405
20.71
2560
2.40
482
1.13
416
8.72
503
9.83
323
23.51
K
Na
Ca
Ba
Cu
Rb
Cs
Tl
Ti
Nb
Fe3+
Mn
Si
Al
H
0.97
1.76
0.01
0.01
3.79
0.15
0.05
2.98
0.02
17.67
0.05
0.06
3.32
3.79
0.20
0.06
0.01
3.00
3.36
0.28
0.10
0.03
2.15
3.24
0.23
0.05
3.00
1.02
0.03
0.21
0.02
2.48
3.41
0.23
0.04
3.00
7.69
0.36
0.28
0.02
1.03
1.24
3.70
0.22
0.05
3.00
9.77
0.51
0.02
0.14
3.72
0.22
0.06
3.00
18.67
unchanged. As regards as the solutions of CsCl, RbCl, CuSO4 and Clerichi liquid,
both phase-1 and phase-2 have extremely strong ion-exchange properties, which
permits them to obtain up to 57 wt.% Tl2 O, 37 wt.% Cs2 O, 29 wt.% Rb2 O and
1.6 wt.% CuO during 12 h (see Table 1):
Original phase: (Na1.76 K0.97 Ca0.01 Ba0.01 )=2.76 [(Ti3.79 Nb0.15 Fe3+
0.05 )=3.99 Si3 O
14.81 (OH)1.19 ]8.2H2 O, Tl-exchanged phase: (Tl3.32 Ca0.06 Na0.05 )=3.44 [(Ti3.79 Nb0.20
Fe3+
0.06 Mn0.01 )=4.06 Si3 O15.85 (OH)0.16 ]1.6H2 O, Cs-exchanged phase: (Cs2.15 K0.28
Na0.10 Ca0.03 )=2.56 [(Ti3.24 Nb0.23 Fe3+
Rb-exchanged
0.05 )=3.52 Si3 O12.84 (OH)3.16 ],
)
[Si
O
phase: (Rb2.48 Na0.21 K0.03 Ca0.02 )=2.73 (Ti3.41 Nb0.23 Fe3+
3 13.67 (OH)2.33 ]
0.04 =3.68
2.7 H2 O, Cu-exchanged phase: (K0.51 Cu0.14 Na0.02 )=0.67 (Ti3.72 Nb0.22 Fe3+
0.06 )=4.00
[Si3 O12.98 (OH)3.02 ]7.8 H2 O.
31
Table 2 X-ray powder diffraction data for Rb-, Tl- and Cu-exchanged phase-1 and for phase-2
(naturally decationized phase-1)
hkl
100
110
111
200
210
211
220
221, 300
310
311
222
320
321
400
322, 410
330, 411
331
420
422
430, 500
333, 511
521
440
441, 522
433, 530
Phase-2
Clerichi liquid
Iobs
dobs (A)
100
7.85
60
80
30
90
80
60
60
30b
40
4.55
3.92
3.54
3.20
2.77
2.61
2.47
2.36
2.26
30
10
40
50
2.100
1.957
1.898
1.848
50
30
30
10
20
50
1.751
1.597
1.564
1.504
1.426
1.382
Iobs
dobs (A)
20
100
100
30
90
100
60
60
60
50
10
30
5.55
4.54
3.92
3.52
3.20
2.77
2.61
2.47
2.36
2.26
2.161
2.093
50
50
20
60
40
30
10
10
50
10
1.894
1.840
1.795
1.748
1.593
1.566
1.504
1.427
1.381
1.361
CuSO4
Iobs
dobs (A)
Icalc
dcalc (A)
100
7.88
100
7.88
30
30
30
90
60
60
60
30
20
4.57
3.95
3.57
3.21
2.79
2.63
2.50
2.37
2.27
30
20
4.53
3.96
80
30
40
40
20b
10
3.205
2.774
2.622
2.478
2.367
2.26
10
20
50
50
2.107
1.969
1.906
1.850
10
30
20
30
2.093
1.96
1.905
1.843
40
30
40
20
30
50
30
20
1.759
1.606
1.572
1.512
1.435
1.390
1.369
1.350
10
20b
20b
1.752
1.598
1.561
20
1.377
32
Fig. 4 BSE-image of the phase-1 crystal exchanged by Cs and concentration curves of indicated
elements along the line AB
33
Fig. 5 BSE-image of blocked crystals of phase-1 (growing on sazykinaite-(Y) crystal) treated with
solution of RbCl+CsCl
Block rims: (Cs1.24 Rb1.03 K0.36 Na0.28 Ca0.02 )=2.93 (Ti3.70 Nb0.22 Fe3+
0.05 )=3.97 [Si3
O15 (OH)1.00 ]4.39 H2 O;
Block cores: (Na2.44 K1.10 )=3.54 (Ti3.76 Nb0.23 Fe3+
0.03 )=4.02 [Si3 O15.81 (OH)2.19 ]
10.04 H2 O.
All investigated crystals are strongly mosaic as one shown in Fig. 5 and the crystal structures of these minerals have not been studied in detail because of a highly
diffuse character of their X-ray diffraction patterns obtained from single crystals.
In order to check their identity with the synthetic material reported previously (see
above), we have performed hydrothermal synthesis experiments.
Synthesis
Pharmacosiderite-related titanosilicate of sodium has been prepared hydrothermally
from mixtures of titanyl sulphate, sodium silicate, potassium hydroxide, sodium
hydroxide, and deionised water. The synthesis mixture was formed by combining two precursor solutions, one containing titanyl sulphate, deionised water, and
another containing sodium silicate hydrate, sodium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide, and deionised water. In solution-1, a total weight of 3.238 g of sodium silicate
(1823% Na2 O, 1921% SiO2 ) was mixed with 15 ml of deionised water, 0.320 g
of sodium hydroxide (98% NaOH, Vekton), 0.224 of potassium hydroxide (86%
KOH, Vekton) (Sol. 1). This mixture was stirred slightly. Solution-2 was prepared
by mixing 0.392 g of titanyl sulphate (TiOSO4 , Vekton), and 10 ml of deionised water. After that solution-2 was added to solution-1 by slight stirring. Finally, white
synthesis mixture was obtained and then transferred into 50 ml Teon-lined stainless steel autoclave. Crystallization was carried out at 180 C for 11 days.
After cooling, the content of the autoclave was ltered and washed by deionised
water, followed by overnight drying at room temperature in ambient air.
34
X-ray powder diffraction pattern was obtained using DRON-2 powder diffractometer with CuK -radiation (Fig. 6). The pattern is similar to those reported for
pharmacosiderite-type titanosilicates reported previously and the mineral phases reported herein.
Discussion
Since the K content in the minerals under consideration is about 1 and the minerals
are highly hydrated, we believe that the K+ cations occupy the large cavities in the
titanosilicate framework. Monovalent cations larger than Na+ and K+ easily replace
Taking into
both K+ and H2 O and the unit cell parameters decrease by 0.040.05 A.
account some deciency of Ti in the structure (see Table 1), such re-equilibrium
seems to be much more reliable.
Divalent copper can be separated from a hydrothermal solution due to its afnity to hydration. However, under ambient conditions, we were unable obtain a Cuexchanged phase.
Trigonal modications of the minerals under consideration, obviously, exist under ultraalkaline conditions only. Consequently, decreasing of solutions alkalinity
with time causes its transformation into a cubic modication. However, sometimes
rhombohedral crystal structure can be stabilized for example, if hydrothermal solutions are enriched in Sr2+ or in the case when Na is pumped into the central part
of crystals during substitution of Cs+ for Na+ , K+ and H2 O. The last effect blocks
structure channels and interrupts phase transition to a cubic modication.
It is important that small (<20 m diameter) crystals can be fully Cs-exchanged,
and we can not decationize them under ambient conditions. It means that the
35
minerals considered are selective cation-exchangers for Cs and can be used for the
removal of 137 Cs from radioactive waste solutions.
Acknowledgements We thank Swiss National Foundation (SNF) for nancial support in the
framework of the SCOPES program. D.V.S. and S.V.K. thank Russian federation Ministry of Science and Education for nancial support through the RNP grant (2.1.1.3077) and Molecular geochemistry and biogeochemistry project of the program Innovative education environment in a
classical University.
References
Behrens EA, Cleareld A (1997) Titanium silicates, M3 HTi4 O4 (SiO4 )3 4H2 O (M = Na+ , K+ ),
with three-dimensional tunnel structures for the selective removal of strontium and cesium
from wastewater solutions. Micropor Mater 11:6575
Behrens EA, Poojary DM, Cleareld A (1996) Syntheses, crystal structures, and ion-exchange
properties of porous titanosilicates, HM3 Ti4 O4 (SiO4 )3 4(H2 O) (M = H+ , K+ , Cs+ ), structural
analogues of the mineral pharmacosiderite. Chem Mater 8:12361244
Behrens EA, Poojary DM, Cleareld A (1998) Syntheses, X-ray powder structures, and preliminary ion-exchange properties of germanium-substituted titanosilicate pharmacosiderites:
HM3 (AO)4 (BO4 )3 4(H2 O) (M = K, Rb, Cs; A = Ti, Ge; B = Si, Ge). Chem Mater 10:959967
Chapman DM, Roe AL (1990) Synthesis, characterization and crystal chemistry of microporous
titaniumsilicate materials. Zeolites 10:730737
Dadachov MS, Harrison WTA (1997) Synthesis and crystal structure of Na4 [(TiO)4 (SiO4 )3 ]
6H2 O, a rhombohedrally distorted sodium titanium silicate pharmacosiderite analogue. J Solid
State Chem 134:409415
Harrison WTA, Gier TE, Stucky GD (1995) Single-crystal structure of Cs3 HTi4 O4 (SiO4 )3
4(H2 O), a titanosilicate pharmacosiderite analog. Zeolites 5:408412
Introduction
Tobermorite is a hydrated calcium silicate, structurally related to the CSH compounds, the main binding product of Portland cement.
and tobermorite group started in 1880 when HedThe story of tobermorite 11 A
dle described a hydrate calcium silicate found in three localities of Scotland, two
near Tobermory, in Mull island, and one at Dunvegan, in Skye island (Heddle, 1880).
Afterwards tobermorite has been discovered in two other Scottish localities and subsequently in various localities all over the world.
sometimes together
The minerals of the tobermorite group (tobermorite 11 A,
phase, plombierite, and in a couple of cases with the 9 A
phase, riverwith the 14 A
sideite) form through the action of hydrothermal uids mainly at late stages of the
evolution of different geological environments.
One of the two most recurrent occurrences is in vugs, ssures or veins in basalts,
frequently in association with zeolites and gyrolite. The other frequent genesis is in
Stefano Merlino
Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Universit`a di Pisa, Via S. Maria 53, 56126 Pisa, Italy, e-mail:
[email protected]
Elena Bonaccorsi
Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Universit`a di Pisa, Via S. Maria 53, 56126 Pisa, Italy
Marco Merlini
Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra A. Desio, Universit`a di Milano, Via Botticelli 23, 20133
Milano, Italy
Fabio Marchetti
Dipartimento di Chimica e Chimica Industriale, Universit`a di Pisa, Via Risorgimento 35, 56126
Pisa, Italy
Walter Garra
Dipartimento di Chimica e Chimica Industriale, Universit`a di Pisa, Via Risorgimento 35, 56126
Pisa, Italy
37
38
S. Merlino et al.
typical repeat of 7.3 A. The tetrahedral chain may be connected to the calcium rib in the b direction.
bons in two distinct but equivalent positions shifted by 3.65 A
Consequently the various compounds in the tobermorite group may be described in
terms of OD layers, fully ordered in two dimensions, with a and b translation vec = 90 in all the tobermorite phases), which thanks to the
tors (a = 11.3, b = 7.4 A,
ambiguity of the connection between the silicon tetrahedral and calcium polyhedral
modules may stack according to two distinct ways along the c* direction, giving
rise to a whole family of disordered or ordered sequences (polytypes): in all the
possible sequences pairs of adjacent layers are geometrically equivalent, no matter
39
Fig. 1 Connection of
wollastonite-like silicate
chains and Ca polyhedral
layer
40
S. Merlino et al.
among the various phases of the tobermorite group depend on the way in which
these complex layers are stacked along c, and on the amounts of water molecules
and additional zeolitic calcium cations, which are located between these layers.
Thermal Behaviour
in which the complex layers are separated by water-rich sheets,
Tobermorite 14 A,
looses part of its water molecule if heated to about 80 100 C. The distance be to nearly 11.3 A.
Experimental
In-situ high temperature powder diffraction was used to obtained time-resolved
structural data for different samples of natural and synthetic tobermorites. The data
were collected at the Beamline Gilda, at the synchrotron ESRF (Grenoble, France).
Samples were loaded in thin capillaries (diameter 0.5 mm) and heated by an air
blower up to 900 C. In front of the IP a slit selects a vertical slice of the diffracted
pattern; the IP can translate horizontally so permitting the collection of time resolved
data for studying phase transitions.
from S. Vito
The samples we examined were: (1) a natural tobermorite 11 A
di Leguzzano (Vicenza, Italy); (2) a natural tobermorite 11 A, mixed with ettrin from Wesgite, from Montalto di Castro (Italy); (3) a natural tobermorite 11 A
sels mine (South Africa); (4) a synthetic (Na+Eu)-tobermorite, described in Ferreira
et al. (2003) and kindly given us by Prof. Rocha (Aveiro, Portugal). The sample we
41
studied had chemical formula Ca0.5 Na2 Eu2 [Si6 O16 (OH)]3H2 O, and was obtained
from the original phase by cation-exchange, namely substituting 1 K+ by 0.5 Ca2+
cations; (5) a Tbtobermorite, synthesised by one of us (Garra, 2007).
The cell parameters were rened using the GSAS crystallographic suite of programs (Larson and Von Dreele, 1994) with the EXPGUI graphical user interface
(Toby, 2001).
Preliminary Results
(1) The sample has chemical formula Ca4.0 (Si5.5 Al0.5 )O14.5 (OH)2.5 .5H2 O. Its unit
cell parameters were measured from room temperature up to 900 C. In Fig. 3
the ratios between the a, b and c parameters and the corresponding values at
room temperature are displayed in function of T .
The changes are obviously anisotropic; however, no sharp discontinuity was
observed, and its c parameter increased quite smoothly during all the heating
run. This sample can be classied as anomalous tobermorite.
(2) In the sample from Montalto di Castro, a Ca- and Al-rich tobermorite 11 A,
with chemical composition Ca5.0 Si5.0 Al1.0 O16 (OH)5H2 O, is mixed with ettringite. At nearly 150 C the ettringite peaks disappears from the powder pat
tern (it becomes amorphous), whereas at nearly 270 C all the tobermorite 11 A
(Fig. 4). This behaviour can be classied as
transforms into tobermorite 9 A
normal.
from Wessels mine
(3) A more complex pattern is shown by the tobermorite 11 A
as normal
(Fig. 5). At 300 C it does not shrink its interlayer spacing to 9.3 A,
tobermorites do. On the contrary, it preserves its c parameter until, at nearly
450 C, it partially transforms into a new phase with interlayer spacing of about
1.015
c /c0
1.010
1.005
R 1.000
b /b0
0.995
0.990
a /a0
0.985
0
200
400
600
T (C)
800
1000
Fig. 3 Changes with temperature of the ratios a/a0 , b/b0 , c/c0 for an anomalous tobermorite
42
S. Merlino et al.
23.5
22.5
21.5
c ()
tobermorite 11
tobermorite 9
20.5
19.5
18.5
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
T (C)
22.08 A.
23.5
22.5
c ()
21.5
tobermorite 11
20.5
"'tobermorite 10"
19.5
18.5
0
100
200
300
T (C)
400
500
600
43
1.010
c /c0
1.005
1.000
b /b0
R 0.995
0.990
a /a0
0.985
0.980
0
200
400
600
800
1000
T (C)
Fig. 7 Coexistence of
and of a
tobermorite 11 A
new phase with a shorter c
parameter after heating up to
370 C
23.0
22.5
c ()
22.0
21.5
21.0
20.5
20.0
tobermorite 11
19.5
19.0
"tobermorite 10"
18.5
18.0
0
200
400
600
T (C)
800
1000
(5) The synthetic Tbtobermorite, Na2.8 Tb2 Si6 O15.8 (OH)1.2 3H2 O] (Fig. 7), may
be compared with the tobermorite from Wessels mine (Fig. 5). Also the
Tb-tobermorite, in fact, does not shrink its c parameter before 300 C, but partially transforms into a different phase at higher temperature, with an interlayer
References
(plomBonaccorsi E, Merlino S, Kampf AR (2004) The crystal structure of tobermorite 14 A
bierite), a CSH phase. J Am Ceram Soc 88:505512
Bonaccorsi E, Merlino S (2005) Modular microporous minerals: cancrinite-davyne group and
CSH phases. Rev Mineral Geochem 57:241290
44
S. Merlino et al.
Ferreira A, Ananias D, Carlos LD, Morais CM, Rocha J (2003) Novel microporous lanthanide
silicates with tobermorite-like structure. J Am Ceram Soc 125:1457314579
Garra W (2007) Silicati microporosi di terre rare, con struttura tipo tobermorite: preparazione e
studio strutturale. Dissertation (in Italian), University of Pisa
natural tobermorite Ca2.25 [Si3 O7.5 (OH)1.5 ]
Hamid SA (1981) The crystal structure of the 11 A
2H2 O. Z Kristallogr 154:189198
Heddle MF (1880) Preliminary notice of substances which may prove to be new minerals. Mineral
Mag 4:117123
Henmi C, Kusachi I (1989) Monoclinic tobermorite from Fuka, Bitchu-cho, Okayama prefecture,
Japan (in Japanese). J Min Pet Econ Geol 84:374379 (in Japanese)
Henmi C, Kusachi I (1992) Clinotobermorite Ca5 Si6 (O,OH)18 .5H2 O, a new mineral from Fuka,
Okayama prefecture, Japan. Mineral Mag 56:353358
Hoffmann C, Armbruster T (1997) Clinotobermorite, Ca5 [Si3 O8 (OH)]2 .4H2 O Ca5 [Si6 O17 ].
5H2 O, a natural CSH(I) type cement mineral: determination of the substructure. Z Kristallogr 212:864873
Larson AC, Von Dreele RB (1994) General structure analysis system (GSAS). Los Alamos National Laboratory Report LAUR 86748
McConnell JDC (1954) The hydrated calcium silicates riversideite, tobermorite, and plombierite.
Mineral Mag 30:293305
Megaw HD, Kelsey CH (1956) Crystal structure of tobermorite. Nature 177:390391
Merlino S, Bonaccorsi E, Armbruster T (1999) Tobermorites: their real structure and order-disorder
(OD) character. Am Mineral 84:16131621
Merlino S, Bonaccorsi E, Armbruster T (2000) The real structures of clinotobermorite and tober OD character, polytypes, and structural relationships. Eur J Mineral 12:411429
morite 9 A:
normal and
Merlino S, Bonaccorsi E, Armbruster T (2001) The real structure of tobermorite 11 A:
anomalous forms, OD character and polytypic modications. Eur J Mineral 13:577590
Toby BH (2001) EXPGUI, a graphical user interface for GSAS. J Appl Crystallogr 34:210213
Zanardi S, Carati A, Cruciani G, Bellussi G, Millini R, Rizzo C (2006) Synthesis, characterization
and crystal structure of new microporous bismuth silicates. Micropor Mesopor Mat 97:3441
Among the rare elements in the Earth Crust, Zr is the most abundant one. Zr-minerals
mainly occur in alkaline rocks, except zircon ZrSiO4 which was described in various types of rocks. Zirconium silicates revealed widely in nature and their formation
is mainly connected with hydrothermal conditions (200500 C). The most recent
statistics of the IMA Commission of New Minerals, Nomenclature and Classication (CNMNC) shows that among Zr containing minerals Zr silicates form the
largest class (73 from the total number of 94 mineral species). The crystal structures of Zr-silicates and Ti-silicates in the beginning of 70th contributed the theory of mixed frameworks formed by TO4 tetrahedra (T=P,Si) and MO6 octahedra
(M=Zr,Ti). Zirconosilicates which mixed frameworks are characterized by general
formula [Zrm Sin O3m+2n ]2m form the largest group within the family of Zr-silicates
(53 min. sp.). Most of these compounds exhibit technologically important alkali-ion
mobility and ion exchange properties. The mixed frameworks in the structures of
these compounds are characterized by the formation of the almost equivalent bonds
SiOSi or SiOZr, which determine the stability of such polyhedral congurations. ZrO6 -octahedra in the structures of zirconosilicates with mixed frameworks
do not show the tendency to condensation (unlike TiO6 - and NbO6 -octahedra in the
structures of titano- and niobosilicates) (Pyatenko et al., 1999). Thats why there are
no natural zirconosilicates with the ratio Si:Zr<1. The lowest Si:Zr ratio occurs in
keldyshite, parakeldyshite and khibinskite (Si:Zr = 2) and some other related zirconosilicates in which structures isolated ZrO6 -octahedra are connected with Si2 O7
pyrogroups (Pekov and Chukanov, 2005). The conguration of silicate complexes
in the structures of zirconosilicates with mixed frameworks may be different. Silicate pyrogroups, 3-, 4- and 6-membered tetrahedral rings, spiral chains, bands and
corrugated sheets were identied as the elements of the mixed frameworks in the
Natalia V. Zubkova
Geology Department, Moscow
Nata [email protected]
State
University,
119992
Moscow,
Russia,
e-mail:
45
46
Chemical formula
Reference
Khibinskite
K2 ZrSi2 O7
Parakeldyshite
Keldyshite
Na2 ZrSi2 O7
(Na,H)2 ZrSi2 O7 nH2 O
Catapleiite
Calcium
catapleiite
Wadeite
Bazirite
IMA 2003-019
CaZrSi3 O9 2H2 O
Khomyakov
[Si2 O7 ]-pyrogroups
et al. (1974)
Pekov et al. (2007)
Khalilov
et al. (1978)
Ilyushin
3-membered Si-rings
et al. (1981b);
Brunowsky (1936)
Merlino et al. (2004)
K2 ZrSi3 O9
BaZrSi3 O9
Na6 Sr12 Ba2 Zr13 Si39 B4
O123 (OH)6 20H2 O
Na15 Sr12 Zr14 Si42 B6 O138
(OH)6 12H2 O
Kostylevite
Petarasite
Ilyushin
et al. (1981a)
Ghose et al. (1980)
Bobtraillite
Lovozerite
group
Kapustinite
Litvinskite
Zirsinalite
Lovozerite
Yamnova
et al. (2004)
Yamnova
et al. (2001)
Pudovkina
et al. (1980)
Yamnova
et al. (2001)
Silicate complex
3-membered Si-rings
Presumably related to the
benitoite group
Two types of 3-membered
(Si3 O9 ) rings and
additional 3-membered
[Si2 BO7 (OH)2 ] ring
comprise a
two-dimensional, giant
pinwheel motif along [001].
6-membered Si-rings
6-membered elliptical
Si-rings
Pseudotetragonal
6-membered rings
47
Table 1 (continued)
Mineral name
Chemical formula
Reference
Silicate complex
Eudialyte group
(20 mineral
species)
Johnsen and
Grice (1999);
Johnsen et al. (2003)
(review for the
whole group)
Sazykinaite (Y)
3- and 9-membered
Si-rings; additional
Si-tetrahedron can occupy
center of one 9-membered
ring (center of the second
9-membered ring is
occupied by
M III -octahedron)
Helical chains [Si3 O9 ]
with 3 tetrahedra in period
Hilairite
Calciohilairite
CaZrSi3 O9 3H2 O
Komkovite
BaZrSi3 O9 3H2 O
Umbite
K2 ZrSi3 O9 H2 O
Ilyushin (1993)
Paraumbite
Vlasovite
Khomyakov
et al. (1983)
Gobechiya
et al. (2003)
Elpidite
Cannillo
et al. (1973)
Georgechaoite
NaKZrSi3 O9 2H2 O
Gaidonnayite
Terskite
Ghose and
Thakur (1985)
Chao (1985)
Pudovkina and
Chernitsova (1991)
Natrolemoynite
Lemoynite
Tumchaite
Armstrongite
Dalyite
Zeravshanite
Loudounite
Structure
Rastsvetaeva and
Khomyakov (1992)
Ilyushin
et al. (1981c)
Pushcharovsky
et al. (2002)
Sokolova
et al. (1991)
McDonald and
Chao (2001)
Wollastonite-type chains
[Si3 O9 ]
Le Page and
Perrault (1976)
Subbotin
[Si4 O11 ]-sheets
et al. (2000)
CaZrSi6 O15 2.5H2 O
Kabalov et al. (2000) Corrugated silicate sheets
[Si6 O15 ]
Fleet (1965)
Corrugated silicate sheets
K2 ZrSi6 O15
[Si6 O15 ] formed by 4-, 6and 8-membered rings.
Cs4 Na2 Zr3 Si18 O45 2H2 O
Uvarova et al. (2004) [Si18 O45 ]18 sheets with
ve- and eight-membered
silicate rings
NaCa5 Zr4 Si16 O40 (OH)11 Dunn and
8H2 O
Newbury (1983)
unknown
48
49
is characterized by a twice decrease in the size of the unit cell compared with
the cells of other representatives of hilairite group with the space group R32 being retained. In addition the structure of this mineral has a position (occupied by
H3 O+ cations and water molecules) which was not found in other representatives
of hilairite group. At the same time the conguration of the zirconiumsilicon
oxygen mixed framework remains unchanged: it consists of helical chains [Si3 O9 ]
linked by Zr-octahedra. The cavities of the framework are occupied by (Ca,Na)cations, oxonium and water molecules. The constitution and possible mechanism
of the formation of cation-decient calciohilairite can help to elucidate the nature of partially decationized varieties of many zeolite-like minerals which are
widespread in hydrothermally altered alkaline rocks and their derivatives. The general scheme of isomorphism which leads from hilairite to cation-decient calciohilairite can be presented by the following way: 2Na+ + H2 O 0.5Ca2+ + 1.5 +
(H3 O)+ (Pushcharovskii et al., 2002). This scheme can explain one of the mechanisms of gentle leaching of sodium from zeolite-like compounds.
Calcium catapleiite calcium counterpart of catapleiite, Na2 ZrSi3 O9 2H2 O, is
a rare mineral found in hydrothermal assemblages associated with alkaline complexes. The crystal structure of catapleiite was described by Brunowsky (1936) in
Later the structure of catapleiite
the space group P63 /mmc, a =7.40, c =10.05 A.
has been determined and rened in monoclinic symmetry by Chao et al. (1973)
(sp.gr. I2/c) and by Ilyushin et al. (1981b) (sp.gr. B2/b). Monoclinic structure and
the hexagonal one are essentially the same: they contain a mixed framework built up
of [ZrO6 ] octahedra and [Si3 O9 ] rings of tetrahedra; however the sites occupied by
Na atoms and H2 O molecules are exchanged in the monoclinic model with respect
to the hexagonal one. Calcium catapleiite, CaZrSi3 O9 2H2 O is considered as an
end-member of a solid-solution series with catapleiite, Na2 ZrSi3 O9 2H2 O, and was
originally described as presenting the crystal lattice of catapleiite (Portnov, 1964)
with hexagonal space group P63 /mmc. However structural investigations carried out
for catapleiite later (Chao et al., 1973; Ilyushin et al., 1981) did not conrm that
indication and suggest that the claimed hexagonal symmetry of catapleiite could
be not correct (Pyatenko et al., 1999). In 2004 structural determination of calcium
catapleiite from the type locality (Burpala massif, northern Baikal Region, Siberia,
Russia) (Merlino et al., 2004) showed that this mineral is actually orthorhombic,
(R = 0.0528). The
space group Pbnn, a = 7.378(1), b = 12.779(1), c = 10.096(1) A
crystals display three-fold twinning (Drilling) about the c axis, with the three individuals rotated by 120 one from the other. In common with catapleiite, the most
specic feature of calcium catapleiite is a mixed framework formed by [ZrO6 ] octahedra and 3-membered [Si3 O9 ] silicate rings. The Ca cations and H2 O molecules
are located in tunnels of the framework. The complex of tetrahedra which has the
form of a 3-membered ring is quite rare in minerals. The relatively low stability of
3-membered silicate rings is dependent on the large deviations of the SiOSi angles ( 130 ) from 147 , which is typical of a ring of tetrahedra with low energy
(Chakoumakos et al., 1981).
50
51
52
53
References
Blinov VA, Shumyatskaya NG, Voronkov AA, Ilyukhin VV, Belov NV (1977) Renement of the
crystal structure of wadeite K2 Zr(Si3 O9 ) and its relationship to kindred structural types. Sov
Phys Crystallogr 22:3135
54
Boggs RC (1988) Calciohilairite: CaZrSi3 O9 3H2 O, the calcium analogue of hilairite from the
golden horn batholith, northern Cascades, Washington. Am Mineral 73:11911194
Brunowsky B (1936) Die Struktur des Katapleits (Na2 ZrSi3 O9 2H2 O). Acta phys chim URSS
5:863892
Burke EAJ, Ferraris G (2004) New minerals approved in 2003 and nomenclature modications
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Introduction
Microporous titano- and niobosilicates are promising materials for a wide range of
industrial applications, including gas separation, catalysis, radioactive waste management, etc. (Rocha and Anderson 2000; Ferraris and Merlino 2005). The most
famous representatives of the titanosilicate family are Engelhard TitanoSilicates,
ETS-4 and ETS-10. Ion-exchanger ETS-4 rstly synthesized by S. M. Kuznicki
(1989) is a synthetic analog of zorite, Na6 [Ti(Ti, Nb)4 (Si6 O17 )2 (OH)5 ](H2 O)10.5 , a
rare mineral discovered by Merkov et al. (1973) in the aegirine-microcline-natrolite
vein Yubileinaya within lujavrite at Mt. Karnasurt (the Lovozero alkaline massif).
Chivruaiite is found in three different hydrothermal veins within the Khibiny
and Lovozero alkaline massifs (Menshikov et al., 2006): (1) microcline vein in
Viktor N. Yakovenchuk
Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Apatity, Russia
e-mail: [email protected]
Sergey V. Krivovichev
Department of Crystallography, Faculty of Geology, St. Petersburg State University, University
Emb. 7/9, St. Petersburg, Russia
Yurii P. Menshikov
Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Apatity, Russia
Yakov A. Pakhomovsky
Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Apatity, Russia
Gregory Yu. Ivanyuk
Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Apatity, Russia
Thomas Armbruster
Institute of Geological Sciences, Research Group: Mineralogical Crystallography, University of
Bern, Freiestr. 3, CH-3012 Bern, Switzerland
Ekaterina A. Selivanova
Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Apatity, Russia
57
58
59
Ca4 K1x (Ti5x Nbx )[(Si6 O17 )2 |(O, OH)5 ] 13 14H2 O, where x = 0 1.
The structure of chivruaiite is based upon open framework of SiO4 tetrahedra, TiO6 octahedra, and TiO5 pyramids, cavities are occupied by Ca2+ and K+
cations, and H2 O molecules (Fig. 3a). Large K+ cations are located within the large
channels of octangular prisms (see Fig. 3b) and is approximately at the center of
8-membered rings of tetrahedra formed as a result of condensation of two single
tetrahedral chains (Menshikov et al., 2006). The Ca2+ cations are in the walls of
the titanosilicate framework: the Ca1 site blocks the 7 MR formed by four silicate
tetrahedra and three Ti polyhedra (see Fig. 3b), whereas the Ca2 site is approximately at the center of the 6 MR formed by four silicate tetrahedra and two Ti
Fig. 3 Crystal structure of chivruaiite (a), in which some H2 O molecules are omitted for clarity,
and nodal representation of its titanosilicate framework (b) with positions of Ca2+ and K+ cations
60
Experimental
In our experiments, small (up to 0.5 mm long) crystals of chivruaiite from the
Lovozero massif (vein no. 1) were loaded in 1M solutions of NH4 Cl, CsCl or RbCl
at ambient temperature during 1248 h. No visible changes were found after the
treating and crystal structure and unit cell parameters remain without noticeable
changes according to powder X-ray diffraction data. Examination of polished sections of treated crystals using Leo-1450 scanning electron microscope with Rontec
EDS-analyzer showed homogeneous distributions of Rb and Cs over the whole
crystals (Fig. 4).
The chemical composition of original and treated crystals of chivruaiite from the
vein no. 1 (Table 1) has been studied by wave-length dispersion spectrometry using
Cameca MS-46 electron microprobe (Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre of
the Russian Academy of Sciences, Apatity) operating at 20 kV and 2030 nA. The
following standards were used:
61
Table 1 Chemical composition (wt.%) and unit formula (apfu, Si = 12) of chivruaiite crystals
treated with solutions of NH4 Cl, RbCl and CsCl at ambient temperature during 1248 h
Component
Original
Treated with
NH4 Cl
RbCl
CsCl
Na2 O
MgO
Al2 O3
SiO2
K2 O
CaO
TiO2
MnO
FeO
RbO
SrO
Nb2 O5
Cs2 O
0.10
0.01
0.07
45.14
1.30
10.53
20.63
0.02
0.16
0.28
3.63
45.37
0.06
10.19
21.51
0.04
0.48
4.74
44.30
10.23
19.53
0.19
10.33
0.56
5.57
46.60
0.92
9.72
20.74
0.60
5.27
5.42
SUM
H2 O = 100 SUM
81.87
18.13
82.39
17.61
90.71
9.29
89.27
10.73
3.00
0.04
0.01
0.05
0.44
2.89
0.07
0.02
4.28
0.57
0.01
12.00
31.10
2.97
0.09
2.68
0.09
0.30
0.59
4.28
0.57
12.00
18.42
Ca
Sr
Mn
Na
K
Rb
Cs
Ti
Nb
Fe3+
Al
Si
H
4.13
0.44
0.04
0.02
12.00
30.68
1.80
3.98
0.68
0.04
12.00
16.81
lorenzenite (Na, Ti), pyrope (Mg, Al), diopside (Si, Ca), wadeite (K), metallic vanadium (V), synthetic MnCO3 (Mn), hematite (Fe), sphalerite (Zn), celestine (Sr),
synthetic ZrSiO4 (Zr), metallic niobium (Nb), barite (Ba), synthetic CeS (Ce), lepidolite (Rb) and pollucite (Cs). Water content was calculated as 100 wt.% minus
SUM of analysis. It is established that treated crystals have up to 5 wt.% of Cs
and up to 10 wt.% of Rb in their compositions, content of K decreases slightly in
the CsCl solution and up to zero in the RbCl and NH4 Cl solutions, Ca content decreases after treatment in the CsCl solution only, and content of water decreases
twice when Ca and K are exchanged by Rb and Cs:
Original chivruaiite (Ca3.00 Na0.05 Sr0.04 Mn0.01 )3.10 K0.44
(Ti4.13 Nb0.44 Fe0.04 )4.61 [Si12 O34 |O0.49 (OH)4.51 ] 13.08H2 O
62
Discussion
Therefore, the following substitution mechanisms can be considered for chivruaiite:
1) substitutions within the CaNa positions: 2Na+ (Ca, Sr, Mn)2+ , 3Na+
REE3+ etc;
2) introduction of large cations (K+ , Cs+ , Rb+ , Tl+ etc.) into the channel position;
3) substitutions within the Ti-Nb positions: K+ + Ti4+ + Nb5+ ;
4) O2 OH substitutions for the anion positions bridging between two Ti1 sites.
Medium-large cation of Rb can replace not only cation of K, but also Ca1,
whereas large cation of Cs replaces K only. Besides, such substitution ejects a
half of water molecules from the channels, and in case of Cs part of Ca2 also (see
Fig. 3). It is important that Cs-excanged phase is exclusively stable and can not be
re-exchanged under ambient conditions. It means that chivruaiite-based materials
really can be exclusively effective for the removal of 137 Cs from radioactive waste
solutions.
It has been known that ETS-4 molecular sieve (synthetic analogue of zorite) has
a strong ion-exchange capacity for Sr2+ also (Braunbarth et al. 2000). Analysis of
the structural data reported by Braunbarth et al. (2000) shows that Sr2+ cations in
Sr-exchanged ETS-4 occupy the Ca1 site. Taking into account structural similarities
between zorite and chivruaiite, we suggest that chivruaiite can also have similar ionexchange properties as regards as strontium, which requires special investigations.
Because of zorite-chivruaiite series minerals easily change their composition in
dependence on environment, chivruaiite origin in Nature can be caused by few reasons. The Lovozero massif is strongly depleted in calcium in contrast with the
63
Khibiny massif, which explains the presence of chivruaiite in the Khibiny massif
and zorite in the Lovozero massif. Chivruaiite occurrence within the Chivruai River
valley can be caused by partial assimilation of numerous xenoliths of Devonian
basalt by nepheline-syenite melt as well as by cation-exchange of zorite under inuence of low-temperature solutions enriched in Ca. Really, Na minerals (aegirine,
murmanite, lorenzenite, lamprophyllite, loparite-(Ce) etc.) are earlier in the vein,
while Ca minerals (pectolite, hydroxilapatite and whewellite) are the late.
Acknowledgements We thank Swiss National Foundation (SNF) for nancial support in the
framework of the SCOPES program.
References
Braunbarth C, Hillhouse HW, Nair S, Tsapatis M, Burton A, Lobo RF, Jacubinas RM, Kuznicki
SM (2000) Structure of strontium ion-exchanged ETS-4 microporous molecular sieves. Chem
Mater 12:18571865
Dyer A, Pillinger M (1999) Treatment of radioactive waste using a titanosilicate analog of the
mineral zorite. Roy Soc Chem 239:261269 (Special Publication)
Ferraris G, Merlino S (eds) (2005) Micro- and Mesoporous Mineral Phases. Rev Mineral Geochem,
vol 57. Mineralogical Society of America, Washington DC
Kuznicki SM (1989) Large-pored crystalline titanium molecular sieve zeolites. US Patent No
4853202
Menshikov YuP, Krivovichev SV, Pakhomovsky YaA, Yakovenchuk VN, Ivanyuk GYu,
Mikhailova JA, Armbruster T, Selivanova EA (2005) Natural molecular sieves of the zoritechivruaiite series from hydrothermalites of the Lovozero and Khibiny massif. Appl Geochem
7:4350 (in Russian)
Menshikov YuP, Krivovichev SV, Pakhomovsky YaA, Yakovenchuk VN, Ivanyuk
GYu, Mikhailova JA, Armbruster T, Selivanova EA (2006) Chivruaiite, Ca4 (Ti,Nb)5
[(Si6 O17 )2 (OH,O)5 ]13-14H2 O, a new mineral from hydrothermal veins of Khibiny and
Lovozero alkaline massifs. Am Mineral 91:922928
Merkov AN, Bussen IV, Goiko EA, Kulchitskaya EA, Menshikov YuP, Nedorezova AP (1973)
Raite and zorite new minerals from the Lovozero Tundra. Zapiski VMO 102:1:5462
Rocha J, Anderson MW (2000) Microporous titanosilicates and other novel mixed octahedraltetrahedral framework oxides. Eur J Inorg Chem 2000:801818
Introduction
Within recent years, titanosilicates and other octahedraltetrahedral framework materials have attracted considerable attention due to their applications in catalysis, gas separation, energy storage, optoelectronics, radioactive waste management,
etc. (Behrens et al. 1998; Lamberti 1999; Rocha and Anderson 2000; Zecchina
et al. 2001). Before being synthesized under laboratory conditions, many of these
materials were known as minerals. Engelhard titanosilicate ETS-4, which is now
used in gas industry on a multitonn scale (Kuznicki et al. 2001), is a synthetic analogue of zorite, a framework sodium titanosilicate described in 1970s from alkaline
complexes of the Kola peninsula, Russia (Merkov et al. 1973; Sandomirskii and
Belov 1979). This and many other examples show that investigations of minerals
are not only of mineralogical interest but may also provide important ideas for synthesis of new materials with important industrial applications.
Darya V. Spiridonova
Department of Crystallography, Faculty of Geology, St. Petersburg State University, University
Emb. 7/9, St. Petersburg, Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
Sergey N. Britvin
Department of Crystallography, Faculty of Geology, St. Petersburg State University, University
Emb. 7/9, St. Petersburg, Russia
Sergey V. Krivovichev
Department of Crystallography, Faculty of Geology, St. Petersburg State University, University
Emb. 7/9, St. Petersburg, Russia
Viktor N. Yakovenchuk
Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Apatity, Russia
Thomas Armbruster
Institute of Geological Sciences, Research Group: Mineralogical Crystallography, University of
Bern, Freiestr. 3, CH-3012 Bern, Switzerland
65
66
Zorite and its synthetic analogue ETS-4 have been subjects of relatively few ionexchanged experiments. Braunbarth et al. (2000) and Nair et al. (2001) reported
structure of Sr-exchanged ETS-4 (sometimes indicated as Sr-ETS-4), whereas
Zubkova et al. (2005, 2006) reported structures of Cs-, K-, and Pb-exchanged forms
of zorite. Recently, we have studied Rb- and Ag-exchanged structures of zorite
(Spiridonova et al., to be published). It is noteworthy that, in all mentioned ionexchanged forms of ETS-4 and zorite, ion exchange does not induce any unusual
structural transformations. Ion exchange is either complete (Ag-zorite) or incomplete, with one of the two Na sites being exchanged and another replaced completely
(K-, Cs-, Pb-zorites, and Sr-ETS-4).
Here we report preliminary data on Tl-exchange in zorite and ETS-4 in aqueous
solutions. Quite unexpectedly, X-ray single crystal diffraction studies of
Tl-exchanged zorite provided direct evidence of superstructure reections that are
associated with ordering of Tl+ cations within the titanosilicate porous framework.
Experimental
Crystals of zorite used in this study originated from Yubileinaya vein, the Lovozero
massif. Its chemical composition corresponds to the empirical formula (Na6.71 Ca0.07
Mn0.03 Mg0.01 Sr0.05 Ce0.02 K0.28 )7.17 (Ti4.05 Nb0.45 Al0.02 Fe3+
0.11 )4.63 [Si12 O34 | (OH3.79
O1.21 ]1314H2 O as reported by Menshikov et al. (2006).
The ETS-4 powder was obtained by hydrothermal method from synthesis mixture with molar composition 1Ti:5.7Si:4Na:2K. The synthesis mixture was formed
by combining two precursor solutions, one containing titanium(III) chloride and
deionized water, and another containing crystal hydrate of sodium silicate, sodium
hydroxide, crystal hydrate of potassium uoride, and deionized water. A total weight
of 3.238 g of sodium silicate (1823 % Na2 O, 1921 % SiO2 ) was mixed with 15 ml
of deionized water, 0.320 g of sodium hydroxide (98% NaOH, Vekton), 0.376 g of
crystal hydrate of potassium uoride (KF2H2 O, Vekton) (Sol. 1). This mixture was
stirred thoroughly until a homogeneous white solution was obtained (for 10 min).
For the preparation of the other precursor solution (Sol. 2), we have used 1.813 g
of titanium chloride(III) (15% TiCl3 ), and 10 ml of deionized water. This mixture
was also stirred for 10 min. The solution 2 was added to the solution 1. The resulting white viscous mixture was transferred to 50 ml Teon-lined stainless steel
autoclave. Crystallization was carried out at 190 C for 14 days. After cooling, the
content of the autoclave was ltered and washed by deionized water, followed by
overnight drying at room temperature in ambient air.
Ion-exchange experiments were performed as follows: 50 mg of zorite or ETS-4
were immersed into 5 ml of saturated solution of Tl2 SO4 . Exchange reaction was
done in 5 days, and each day reaction mixture was slightly stirred. The resulting
material washed by deionized water, followed by drying at room temperature in
ambient air.
67
Table 1 Crystallographic data on zorite, ETS-4, and Tl-exchanged zorite determined in this study
Parameters
Zorite
ETS-4
Tl-zorite
Powder data Single crystal data
Space group
a, A
b, A
c, A
3
V, A
Cmmm
23.215(3)
7.222(3)
6.957(1)
1166.3(4)
Cmmm
23.161(5)
7.159(1)
6.916(1)
1146.8(3)
23.158(4)
21.593(4)
13.779(2)
6890(1)
Immm
23.188(5)
21.573(5)
13.803(3)
6905(3)
1200
12000
10000
ETS-4
1000
zorite
800
8000
6000
600
4000
400
2000
200
0
0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
2100
10
20
30
40
50
60
1000
1800
800
Tl-ETS-4
Tl-zorite
1500
600
1200
900
400
600
200
300
0
0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
10
20
30
40
50
60
Fig. 1 X-ray powder diffraction patterns of zorite and ETS-4 in comparison to their Tl-exchanged
forms
68
space group Immm. The structure was solved and rened by means of the program
SHELX-97. The details of structure determination and renement will be reported
elsewhere (Krivovichev et al., in preparation).
X-ray powder diffraction experiments were performed at ambient conditions using automated DRON-2 powder diffractometer with CuK radiation. Unit-cell parameters for zorite, ETS-4, and Tl-zorite were rened by least squares method and
are listed in Table 1. Unfortunately, no single crystals of ETS-4 could be found in the
synthesis products so it is unclear whether Tl-ETS-4 possess the same superstructure as Tl-exchanged zorite. X-ray powder diffraction patterns for Tl-exchanged
ETS-4 and zorite are similar but no superstructure reections could be unambiguously identied (Fig. 1).
Results
The most interesting and important result of this study is the detection of a 1
3 2 superstructure in Tl-exchanged zorite. The superstructure occurs as a result of
ordering of Tl+ ions in the framework channels.
In comparison to original zorite that has only two extra-framework cation sites
(see Menshikov et al. (2006) for details), Tl-zorite contains a number of disordered
Tl sites with different coordination environments.
As it has been known from literature data, zorite and ETS-4 contain two types
of octahedral (Ti) sites, Ti(1) and Ti(2). The Ti(1) site is in octahedral coordination and corresponds to the innite chains of Ti-centered octahedra. Coordination
of the Ti(2) site has been debated in the literature since this site is 25%-occupied
and related to the adjacent Ti(2) site by a mirror plane. For this reason, it has been
unclear whether this site is 6- or 5-coordinated. Sandomirskii and Belov (1979)
suggested that a true coordination is a square pyramid with one TiO distance being
This statement was supported by other studies on ETSrather short (1.61.7 A).
4 and related minerals haineaultite (McDonald and Chao, 2004) and chivruaiite
(Menshikov et al. 2006). However, Cruciani et al. (1998) on the basis of a Rietveld renement of synchrotron X-ray diffraction data suggested that this site is in
fact octahedrally coordinated. In the superstructure observed in Tl-zorite, the mirror plane that relate the Ti(2) site with its symmetry equivalent is absent and two
symmetrically independent Ti(2a) and Ti(2b) sites are observed. It is remarkable
that both these sites have an octahedral coordination with both octahedral corners
occupied by H2 O molecules (as can be deduced from bond-valence analysis). It
is unclear whether ion-exchange does change coordination of the Ti(2) site (e.g.,
through an additional hydration) or the observed effect is due to relaxation of the
average structure induced by the formation of the superstructure.
Another interesting result of the ion exchange can be seen in Fig. 1. It is clear
that intensities in the X-ray diffraction pattern are drastically different for original
and Tl-exchanged samples. These effects are similar for both zorite and ETS-4 that
provides an indirect evidence that Tl-ETS-4 might also possess a superstructure. It is
69
our intention to check this possibility with the help of advanced diffraction methods,
e.g. by means of synchrotron radiation sources.
Acknowledgements We thank Swiss National Foundation (SNF) for nancial support in the
framework of the SCOPES program. D.V.S., S.N.B., and S.V.K. thank Russian federation Ministry
of Science and Education for nancial support through the RNP grant (2.1.1.3077) and Molecular
geochemistry and biogeochemistry project of the program Innovative education environment in
a classical University.
References
Behrens EA, Poojary DM, Cleareld A (1998) Syntheses, X-ray powder structures, and preliminary ion-exchange properties of germanium-substituted titanosilicate pharmacosiderites:
HM3 (AO)4 (BO4 ).3 4(H2 O) (M = K, Rb, Cs; A = Ti, Ge; B = Si, Ge). Chem Mater 10:959967
Braunbarth C, Hillhouse HW, Nair S, Tsapatis M, Burton A, Lobo RF, Jacubinas RM, Kuznicki
SM (2000) Structure of strontium ion-exchanged ETS-4 microporous molecular sieves .Chem
Mater 12:18571865
Cruciani G, de Luca P, Nastro A, Pattison P (1998) Rietveld renement of the zorite structure of
ETS-4 molecular sieves. Micropor Mesopor Mat 21:143153
Kuznicki SM, Bell VA, Nair S, Hillhouse HW, Jacubinas, Braunbarth CM, Toby BH, Tsapatis M
(2001) A titanosilicate molecular sieve with adjustable pores for size-selective adsorption of
molecules. Nature 412:720724
Lamberti C (1999) Electron-hole reduced effective mass in monoatomic OTiOTiO- quantum
wires embedded in the siliceous crystalline matrix of ETS-10. Micropor Mesopor Mat 30:
155163
McDonald AM, Chao GY (2004) Haineaultite, a new hydrated sodium calcium titanosilicate from
Mont Saint-Hilaire, Quebec: description, structure determination and genetic implications. Can
Mineral 42:769780
Menshikov YuP, Krivovichev SV, Pakhomovsky YaA, Yakovenchuk VN, Ivanyuk
GYu, Mikhailova YuA, Armbruster T, Selivanova EA (2006) Chivruaiite,
Ca4 Ti5 [(Si6 O17 )2 |O4 (OH)] 14H2 O, a new mineral from hydrothermalites of Khibiny
and Lovozero alkaline massifs, and its relations with zorite. Am Mineral 91:922928
Merkov AN, Bussen IV, Goiko EA, Kulchitskaya EA, Menshikov YuP, Nedorezova AP (1973)
Raite and zorite new minerals from the Lovozero Tundra. Zapiski VMO 102(1)5462 (in
Russian)
Nair S, Jeong H-K, Chandrasekaran A, Braunbarth C, Tsapatis M, Kuznicki SM (2001) Synthesis
and structure determination of ETS-4 single crystals. Chem Mater 13:42474254
Rocha J, Anderson MW (2000) Microporous titanosilicates and other novel mixed octahedral
tetrahedral framework oxides. Eur J Inorg Chem 2000:801818
Sandomirskii PA, Belov NV (1979) The OD structure of zorite. Sov Phys Crystallogr 24:686693
Zecchina A, Llabres i Xamena FX, Paze C, Turnes Palomino G, Bordiga S, Otero Arean C (2001)
Alkyne polymerization on the titanosilicate molecular sieve ETS-10. Phys Chem Chem Phys
3:12281231
Zubkova NV, Pushcharovsky DYu, Giester G, Pekov IV, Turchkova AG, Chukanov NV, Tillmanns
E (2005) Crystal structures of K- and Cs-exchanged forms of zorite. Crystallogr Rep 50:
367373
Zubkova NV, Pushcharovsky DYu, Giester G, Pekov IV, Turchkova AG, Tillmanns E, Chukanov
NV (2006) Crystal structure of Pb-exchanged form of zorite. Crystallogr Rep 51:379382
Among the best known mineral localities on our planet, the KhibinaLovozero agpaitic nepheline syenite complex stands out as truly unique; it far surpasses any other
locality both in the total number of mineral species (more than 600) and in the number of those rst described from it (about 200), with all important classes of chemical compounds being represented (Khomyakov 2006). Theoretical understanding of
this unique repository of minerals of alkaline rocks increased continuously as more
and more minerals were discovered, which was reected in the works of several
generations of mineralogists, geochemists, and geologists. As a result, many fundamental theories were formulated and developed, such as A.E. Fersmans idea that
Zr, Ti, and Nb occur in agpaitic magmas as complex anions rather than as ordinary
highly charged cations. This concept not only explained the main mineralogical and
geochemical features of the characteristic elements of agpaitic massifs, but also acquired a wider signicance. It was successfully used in particular by N.V. Belov and
his school to develop the theoretical foundations of the crystal chemistry of minerals with mixed anionic radicals. It was widely used in the works of L.N. Kogarko
and other researchers to justify the most probable models for the genesis of superlarge apatite, loparite, and eudialyte deposits associated with the KhibinaLovozero
complex.
The authors extensive research on the mineralogy of these deposits revealed
that their deep unweathered zones contain abundant hyperagpaitic pegmatoid rocks
supersaturated with alkali, volatile, and rare elements (Khomyakov 1980b, 1990,
1995). These rocks are characterized by the presence of a whole series of very unusual minerals, such as natrosilite Na2 Si2 O5 , natrite Na2 CO3 ,olympite Na5 Li(PO4 )2 ,
which are, respectively, the most alkaline water-soluble silicate, carbonate, and
phosphate ever found in nature. The existence of such salts as crystalline phases
of rocks could not be predicted by traditional theories, so the discovery of their
abundant accumulations in the rocks of Khibina and Lovozero actually signied the
Alexander P. Khomyakov
Institute of Mineralogy, Geochemistry, and Crystal Chemistry of Rare Elements, Moscow, Russia,
e-mail: [email protected]
71
72
A.P. Khomyakov
73
74
A.P. Khomyakov
the Lovozero massif have been found to be altered rocks that were originally
zirsinalitelomonosovite lujavrites. Another important application is to use the
inferred links to obtain materials with desired structures and properties on the basis
of natural minerals through their thermochemical or other treatment (Khomyakov
1990, 1995; Solodov et al. 1977, 1978).
Returning to the above assessment of the KhibinaLovozero complex as an inexhaustible source of new mineral discoveries, it should be noted that the rst signicant discoveries of minerals with unusual compositions and properties
(lomonosovitemurmanite group, etc.) were made by members of the Finnish expeditions headed by Wilhelm Ramsay (in the 1890s) and later by staff of several
Academy of Sciences institutions led by Alexander Fersman, Kuzma Vlasov, and
other prominent scientists. It was, in no small part, through the major advances in
mineralogical research at these institutions, but most notably through their contribution to the discovery of the giant apatite, loparite, and eudialyte deposits that
the Khibina and Lovozero alkaline massifs gained worldwide fame and became
a unique national treasure. The achievements of these pioneers were successfully
continued and multiplied by their students and followers. This can be seen from the
following gures: the rst 80 years of mineralogical discoveries in these two massifs
(18901970) yielded 35 minerals new to science, whereas the much shorter period
from 1971 to 2005 yielded about 150 new minerals (Khomyakov 2006), the greater
part of which (more than 80 species) were discovered with the authors participation.
The marked acceleration in the rate of new mineral discoveries in the Khibina
Lovozero complex in recent decades, as already mentioned, has been due to detailed
studies of the mineral composition of hyperagpaitic rocks. The results of these studies, which were widely publicized in scientic and more popular publications and
presentations in various forums, prompted many researchers to further investigate
the mineralogy of these rocks. In particular, very impressive progress in this area has
been achieved by the young multidisciplinary teams of researchers led by I.V. Pekov
and N.V. Chukanov, who have described more than fty new minerals approved by
the IMA (Pekov 2005).
Many of the new minerals originally described from hyperagpaitic rocks of the
Kola Peninsula were soon found in similar rocks in other regions, namely in the
alkaline massifs of the Gardar (Greenland) and Monteregian (Canada) provinces.
At present, numerous discoveries along these lines continue both Russia and elsewhere, deepening our understanding of the structural and chemical diversity of the
mineral kingdom and conrming the authors concept of an unlimited number of
mineral species (Khomyakov 1997). Simultaneously, hyperagpaitic rocks are yielding increasing numbers of minerals with unusual properties that are of interest to
technological mineralogy and materials science, where research on their practical
applications is underway.
Synthetic titano- and zirconosilicates have long been of interest to materials engineers as a promising new class of sorbents and ion exchangers that could nd applications in various branches of the chemical and petroleum industries (Joung 1967).
Minerals of hyperagpaitic rocks can serve as prototypes for creating such materials,
as was demonstrated in laboratory tests of titanosilicate penkvilksite, zirconosilicate
75
References
Chelishchev NF, Berenshtein BG, Khomyakov AP, Smola VI (1986) A method for removing sulfur
dioxide from gases. Authors Certicate no. 1241558, Byull. Otkrytiya, Izobreteniya, no 24 (in
Russian)
76
A.P. Khomyakov
Chelishchev NF, Khomyakov AP, Berenshtein BG, Smola VI, Lukin VD (1984) A method for
removing sulfur dioxide from gases. Authors Certicate no 1096794, Byull. Otkrytiya, Izobreteniya, no 21 (in Russian)
Ferraris G (1997) Polysomatism as a tool for correlating properties and structures. In: Merlino S
(ed) Modular aspects of minerals, EMU Notes in Mineralogy, vol 1. Eotvos University Press
Budapest, pp 275295
Ferraris G, Belluso E, Gula A, Soboleva SV, Khomyakov AP (2003) The crystal structure
of seidite-(Ce), Na4 (Ce,Sr)2 {Ti(OH)2 (Si8 O18 )}(O,OH,F)4 5H2 O, a modular microporous titanosilicate of the rhodesite group. Can Mineral 41:11831192
Ferraris G, Khomyakov AP, Belluso E, Soboleva SV (1997) Polysomatic relationships in some
titanosilicates occurring in the hyperagpaitic alkaline rocks of the Kola Peninsula, Russia. Proc
30th Int Geol Congr 16:1727
Ferraris G, Merlino S (eds) (2005) Micro- and mesoporous mineral Phases. Rev Mineral Geochem,
vol 57
Joung DA (1967) Methods for manufacture of group IV-B metallosilicate zeolites. US Patent Ofce, no 3.329 (480, 481, 482)
Khomyakov AP (1976a) Constitution and typochemical features of the lomonosovite group minerals. Constitution and Properties of Minerals, Kiev, Naukova Dumka 10:96104 (in Russian)
Khomyakov AP (1976b) The types of oriented intergrowths of the keldyshite group minerals. Geochemistry, Mineralogy, Petrology 25th Int Geol Congr Papers by Soviet Geologists Moscow
Nauka 233240 (in Russian with English abs)
Khomyakov AP (1976c) Homoaxial pseudomorphs of titano- and zirconosilicates as indicators of
the physicochemical conditions of mineral formation in alkaline massifs. Problems of Genetic
Information in Mineralogy. All-Union Mineralogical Seminar, Syktyvkar, Komi Branch, USSR
Academy of Sciences, p 68 (in Russian)
Khomyakov AP (1980a) Inheritance of crystal structures in minerals owing to pseudomorphism
as a factor of speciation. Genetic Information in Minerals Syktyvkar Komi Branch Acad Nauk
USSR 31:2021 (in Russian)
Khomyakov AP (1980b) Typomorphism of minerals in hyperagpaitic pegmatites. Scientic Bases
and Utilization of the Typomorphism of Minerals Nauka Moscow 152157 (in Russian with
English abs)
Khomyakov AP (1990) Mineralogy of Hyperagpaitic Alkaline Rocks. Nauka, Moscow (in Russian
with English abs)
Khomyakov AP (1995) Mineralogy of Hyperagpaitic Alkaline Rocks (Translated from the Russian
edition of 1990: Moscow, Nauka). Clarendon Press, Oxford, UK
Khomyakov AP (1996) Transformation mineral species and their use in palaeomineralogical reconstructions. 30th Int Geol Congr Beijing China 2/3:450
Khomyakov AP (1997) Recent mineral discoveries and the number of mineral species: a reconsideration. Structure and Evolution of the Mineral World Int Mineral Seminar Syktyvkar Geoprint
9899
Khomyakov AP (2002) Highly ordered amphoterosilicates of the eudialyte group as indicators of
maximally alkaline conditions of mineral formation in magmatic processes. Geochemistry of
Igneous Rocks. Alkaline Magmatism of the Earth. All-Russia Seminar Involving CIS Countries, Moscow, GEOKHI, pp 9697 (in Russian)
Khomyakov AP (2004a) Natural aluminium-free micro- and mesoporous amphoterosilicatesa
unique class of matrices for immobilizing high-level waste. 32th Int Geol Congr Florence Italy
Abstr part 1, p 534
Khomyakov AP (2004b) Zeolite-like amphoterosilicates of hyperagpaitic rocks and their unique
properties. Micro- and Mesoporous Mineral Phases, Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei, Rome
231234
Khomyakov AP (2006) The record contribution of the Kola region to the overall system of mineral
species. Proc. III Fersman Scientic Session, Kola Division, Russian Mineral. Soc, Apatity, K
& M, pp 9698 (in Russian)
77
Khomyakov AP, Ferraris G, Belluso E, Britvin SN, Nechelyustov GN, Soboleva SV (1998) Seidite(Ce), Na4 SrCeTiSi8 O22 F 5H2 O, a new mineral with zeolitic properties. Zapiski VMO 4:94
100 (in Russian with English abs)
Khomyakov AP, Kaptsov VV, Shchepochkina NI, Rudnitskaya ES (1978) Superfast hydrolysis of
peralkalic titano- and zirconosilicates: experimental verication (in Russian). Dokl Akad Nauk
SSSR 243(4):10281031
Khomyakov AP, Yushkin NP (1981) The principle of inheritance in crystallogenesis. Dokl Akad
Nauk SSSR 256(5):12291233 (in Russian)
Lin Z, Rocha J, Brandao P, Ferreira A, Esculcas AP, Jesus JDP, Philippou A, Anderson W (1997)
Synthesis and structural characterization of microporous umbite, penkvilksite and other titanosilicates. J Phys Chem B 101:71147120
Pekov IV (2005) Genetic mineralogy and crystal chemistry of rare elements in highly alkaline
postmagmatic systems, Authors Abstract of Doctoral (Geol-Mineral) Dissertation, Moscow,
Moscow State University (in Russian)
Solodov NA, Chepizhnyi KI, Chelishchev NF, Khomyakov AP, Kapitonova TA, Kremenetsky AA,
Nazarova AE (1977) Natural minerals as a basis of new materials. Zapiski VMO 2:193200 (in
Russian)
Solodov NA, Chepizhnyi KI, Chelishchev NF, Kremenetsky AA, Nazarova AE, Khomyakov AP
(1978) New directions in industrial use of natural minerals. Express Information on Laboratory
and Technological Studies and the Concentration of Mineral Raw Materials Moscow VIEMS
4:119 (in Russian)
Yushkin NP, Khomyakov AP, Evzikova NZ (1984) The principle of inheritance in mineral genesis.
Preprint no 93, Syktyvkar, Komi Branch, USSR Academy of Sciences, pp 132 (in Russian
with English abs)
Minerals of the lovozerite group are natural microporous titano- and zirconosilicates. Understanding crystal chemistry of these minerals might be useful for understanding specic features of microporous octahedral-tetrahedral materials in
general, especially those that are of existing or potential use in chemical industry.
Today the lovozerite group includes nine minerals: trigonal (lovozerite, tisinalite,
kazakovite, zirsinalite, combeite), orthorhombic (koashvite, imandrite) and monoclinic (kapustinite, litvinskite).
Lovozerite, has been rst described by Gerasimovskii (1939) from the Lovozero
alkaline massif, Kola peninsula, Russia. The crystal structure of lovozerite was reported by Ilyukhin and Belov (1960a, b) as based upon six-membered rings of
silicate tetrahedra in chair conguration. Initially, the structure was solved in the
monoclinic space group C2, though the crystals were reported to display optically
uniaxial properties. Later and Yamnova et al. (2001a) rened the lovozerite structure in the space group R3. In 19701980s, a number of lovozerite-type minerals
were found in the alkaline massifs of the Kola peninsula: koashvite, (Kapustin
Andrey A. Zolotarev
Department of Crystallography, Faculty of Geology, St. Petersburg State University, St. Petersburg,
Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
Sergey V. Krivovichev
Department of Crystallography, Faculty of Geology, St. Petersburg State University, St. Petersburg,
Russia
Viktor N. Yakovenchuk
Geological Institute of the Kola Science Center of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Apatity
184200, Russia
Thomas Armbruster
Institute of Geological Sciences, research group: mineralogical crystallography, University of
Bern, Freiestr. 3, CH-3012 Bern, Switzerland
Yakov A. Pakhomovsky
Geological Institute of the Kola Science Center of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Apatity
184200, Russia
79
80
et al. 1974a), zirsinalite, (Kapustin et al. 1974b), (Khomyakov et al. 1974), imandrite (Khomyakov et al. 1979), and tisinalite (Kapustin et al. 1980). Zirsinalite,
kazakovite, and tisinalite have been described as trigonal, whereas imandrite and
koashvite have been determined as orthorhombic. Combeite, is another trigonal
lovozerite-group mineral that had initially been described from nephelinites of the
Mt. Shaheru, Congo (Zaire) (Sahama and Hytoeonen 1957) and later from nephelinite and ash ejecta of the Oldoinyo Lengai volcano (Tanzania) (Dawson et al., 1989).
There are two varieties of combeite that have been identied as combeite and P31 21,
high and combeite-low which crystallize in the space groups R 3m
respectively (Fischer and Tillmanns 1983, 1987; Ohsato et al. 1985; Ohsato and
Takeuchi 1986). Recently, two new mineral species of the lovozerite group, litvinskite (Pekov et al. 2000) and kapustinite (Pekov et al. 2003), have been approved by
the Commission on New Minerals and Mineral Names of the International Mineralogical Association (CNMMN IMA). Their structures have been determined to be
monoclinic (Yamnova et al. 2001b, 2004).
We have studied crystal structures of 13 trigonal samples of the lovozerite-group
minerals from various localities within the Khibiny and Lovozero alkaline massifs
of the Kola peninsula, Russia (Table 1). All 13 samples were successfully rened
and were identied as lovozerite, kazakovite, tisiin the maximal space group R 3m
nalite, and zirsinalite (Table 2). No indications of superstructure or symmetry lowering have been observed. Crystals selected for X-ray diffraction experiments were
mounted on a Bruker three-circle CCD-based X-ray diffractometer. The unit-cell
parameters were rened using least-squares techniques (Table 2). Crystal chemical
formulas for the lovozerite-group minerals are given in Table 2. Systematic absences
for all 13 crystals.
and reection statistics were consistent with the space group R 3m
Table 1 Sample localities for the lovozerite-group mineral samples studied by the authors
Sample
Locality
9
12AR
70
73
64
65
67
10
12AU
56
51
52
72
81
Table 2 Crystallographic data and chemical composition of minerals of the lovozerite group studied by the authors
a, A
c, A
Mineral
Sample Space
group
Lovozerite
R 3m
12AR
R 3m
70
R 3m
73
R 3m
64
R 3m
65
R 3m
10.213(2)
13.177(3) 0.0446
(292)
67
R 3m
10.102(2)
13.044(3) 0.0394
(333)
10
R 3m
10.033(5)
12.895(8) 0.0515
(430)
12AU
R 3m
10.057(1)
56
R 3m
10.025(2)
12.931(1) 0.0456
(482)
13.085(2) 0.0474
(416)
Kazakovite 51
R 3m
10.163(1)
13.042(2) 0.0345
(295)
Zirsinalite
52
R 3m
10.306(1)
13.128(2) 0.0422
(308)
72
R 3m
10.322(6)
13.158(5) 0.0414
(292)
Tisinalite
R1
(obs. re.)
Chemical formula
A3 B3C2 M[Si6 O18 ]
Na2.19 Mn0.23 (Zr0.92 Ti0.08 )
[Si6 (O12.65 (OH)5.35 )]
Na2.22 Mn0.30 (Zr0.93 Ti0.07 )
[Si6 (O12.82 (OH)5.18 )]
Na2.57 Mn0.18 (Zr0.84 Ti0.16 )
[Si6 (O12.93 (OH)5.07 )]
Na2.61 Mn0.20 (Zr0.85 Ti0.15 )
[Si6 (O13.01 (OH)4.99 )]
Na2.41 Ca0.24 Fe0.05
(Zr0.84 Ti0.16 )
[Si6 (O12.99 (OH)5.01 )]
Na2.26 Mn0.21 Ca0.15
(Zr0.99 Ti0.01 )
[Si6 (O12.98 (OH)5.02 )]
Na2.37 Ca0.15 Fe0.09 Mn0.05
(Zr0.88 Ti0.12 )
[Si6 (O12.95 (OH)5.05 )]
Na2.03 Mn0.39 Fe0.06
(Ti0.73 Zr0.20 Nb0.07 )
[Si6 (O13.00 (OH)5.00 )]
Na1.94 Mn0.52 (Ti0.87 Zr0.13 )
[Si6 (O12.98 (OH)5.02 )]
Na2.73 Na0.93 Fe0.28 Mn0.25
(Ti0.92 Zr0.08 )
[Si6 (O14.98 (OH)3.02 )]
Na2.97 Na2.27 Mn0.64 Fe0.29
(Ti0.86 Zr0.14 )
[Si6 (O17.13 (OH)0.87 )]
Na3.00 Na2.07 Mn0.92 Ca0.10
(Zr0.90 Ti0.10 )
[Si6 (O17.11 (OH)0.89 )]
Na2.91 Na2.40
(Ca0.80 Na0.60 Mn0.09 )
(Zr0.82 Fe0.13 Ti0.05 )
[Si6 (O17.56 (OH)0.44 )]
82
The framework of crystal structures of minerals of the lovozerite group are based
upon six-membered rings of silicate tetrahedra (Si6 O18 )connected through the
common tops with isolated M-octahedron (M = Ti, Zr, Fe3+ ) which are connected through the common planes with C-octahedron (C = Mn, Fe, Ca, Na). Inside framework are located atoms of sodium and a molecule of water - positions
A and B.
The nomenclature of the trigonal lovozerite-group minerals is based upon two
chemical principles. First, in terms of the M sites, there are Zr-rich (zirsinalite,
lovozerite), Ti-rich (tisinalite, kazakovite), and Ca-rich (combeite) members. Second, among the Ti and Zr members, there are Na-rich (zirsinalite, kazakovite) and
Na-decient (lovozerite, tisinalite) members (position B). This rather simple classication scheme for Ti and Zr members is presented in the following Scheme:
B site occupancy
Ti > Zr
Zr > Ti
Na > 50%
Na < 50%
kazakovite
zirsinalite
tisinalite
lovozerite
This scheme takes into account the M sites (that can be occupied by Ti and Zr),
the A sites (occupied by Na in all members), and the B sites (occupied by Na in Narich members). According to the accepted nomenclature, we had been structurally
studied (Table 2) seven crystals of lovozerite (samples 9, 12ap, 64, 65, 67, 70, 73),
three crystals of tisinalite (samples 10, 12ay, 56), one crystal of kazakovite (the
sample 51) and two crystals of zirsinalite (samples 52, 72).
Trigonal members of the lovozerite group include lovozerite, kazakovite, tisinalite, zirsinalite, and combeite (not studied in this work). The structure of kaza that is the maxkovite was rened by Voronkov et al. (1979) in space group R 3m
imal symmetry for the trigonal lovozerite-type structure (Malinovsky et al. 1993).
Our sample 51 was identied as kazakovite on the basis of chemical and structural
was conrmed.
studies and the space group R 3m
The structure of zirsinalite was studied by Pudovkina et al. (1980) and reported in
and rhombohedral unit cell with parameters a = 10.593(5) A,
83
Table 3 Atomic coordinates, occupancies, and isotropic displacement parameters of the minerals
of the lovozerite group studied by the authors
Site
Sample*
Occupancy
2
Ueq , A
Si
LV-9
LV-12AR
LV-70
LV-73
LV-64
LV-65
LV-67
TS-10
TS-12AU
TS-56
KZ-51
ZS-52
ZS-72
0.14968(7)
0.14960(6)
0.1492(1)
0.1492(1)
0.14960(9)
0.1495(1)
0.14966(8)
0.15163(7)
0.15210(6)
0.15199(7)
0.15215(7)
0.15037(9)
0.1510(1)
0.2994(1)
0.2992(1)
0.2983(2)
0.2983(2)
0.2992(2)
0.2990(2)
0.2993(2)
0.3033(1)
0.3042(1)
0.3040(2)
0.3043(1)
0.3008(2)
0.3020(2)
0.06328(9)
0.06327(8)
0.0635(1)
0.0634(1)
0.0633(1)
0.0635(1)
0.0639(1)
0.06448(9)
0.06487(8)
0.06629(9)
0.06894(9)
0.0668(1)
0.0671(1)
Si
Si
Si
Si
Si
Si
Si
Si
Si
Si
Si
Si
Si
0.0399(4)
0.0397(3)
0.0385(8)
0.0364(7)
0.0389(6)
0.0469(7)
0.0370(6)
0.0376(4)
0.0308(4)
0.0230(4)
0.0199(4)
0.0254(7)
0.0136(8)
LV-9
LV-12AR
LV-70
LV-73
LV-64
LV-65
LV-67
TS-10
TS-12AU
TS-56
KZ-51
ZS-52
ZS-72
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
2/3
2/3
2/3
2/3
2/3
2/3
2/3
2/3
2/3
2/3
2/3
2/3
2/3
1/6
1/6
1/6
1/6
1/6
1/6
1/6
1/6
1/6
1/6
1/6
1/6
1/6
Zr0.92 Ti0.08
Zr0.93 Ti0.07
Zr0.84 Ti0.16
Zr0.85 Ti0.15
Zr0.84 Ti0.16
Zr0.99 Ti0.01
Zr0.88 Ti0.12
Ti0.73 Zr0.20 Nb0.07
Ti0.87 Zr0.13
Ti0.92 Zr0.08
Ti0.86 Zr0.14
Zr0.90 Ti0.10
Zr0.82 Fe0.13 Ti0.05
0.0274(3)
0.0276(2)
0.0302(6)
0.0286(6)
0.0299(6)
0.0349(5)
0.0275(5)
0.0301(4)
0.0228(4)
0.0171(6)
0.0159(6)
0.0219(6)
0.0119(6)
LV-9
LV-12AR
LV-70
LV-73
LV-64
LV-65
LV-67
TS-10
TS-12AU
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.253(1)
0.2520(7)
0.254(1)
0.253(1)
0.255(1)
0.241(2)
0.252(1)
0.2549(5)
0.2552(4)
Mn0.11
Mn0.15
Mn0.09
Mn0.10
Ca0.12 Fe0.03
Mn0.10 Ca0.08
Ca0.08 Fe0.04 Mn0.02
Mn0.18 Fe0.04
Mn0.26
0.060(5)
0.058(3)
0.048(8)
0.049(7)
0.072(9)
0.095(7)
0.067(6)
0.060(2)
0.050(1)
TS-56
KZ-51
ZS-52
ZS-72
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.2546(3)
0.2552(2)
0.2507(3)
0.2522(3)
0.026(1)
0.025(1)
0.037(1)
0.022(1)
O1
LV-9
LV-12AR
LV-70
LV-73
LV-64
LV-65
LV-67
TS-10
TS-12AU
0.2390(2)
0.2389(2)
0.2371(4)
0.2370(3)
0.2370(3)
0.2378(3)
0.2385(3)
0.2425(2)
0.2431(2)
0.4779(5)
0.4779(4)
0.4742(7)
0.4740(6)
0.4741(6)
0.4755(6)
0.4770(5)
0.4851(4)
0.4862(3)
0.0750(4)
0.0752(3)
0.0747(5)
0.0746(4)
0.0752(4)
0.0774(4)
0.0763(4)
0.0761(3)
0.0769(3)
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
0.080(1)
0.078(1)
0.077(2)
0.075(2)
0.078(2)
0.079(2)
0.074(2)
0.072(1)
0.059(1)
84
Table 3 (continued)
Site
Sample*
Occupancy
2
Ueq , A
O1
TS-56
KZ-51
ZS-52
ZS-72
LV-9
LV-12AR
LV-70
LV-73
LV-64
LV-65
LV-67
TS-10
TS-12AU
TS-56
KZ-51
ZS-52
ZS-72
LV-9
LV-12AR
LV-70
LV-73
LV-64
LV-65
LV-67
TS-10
TS-12AU
TS-56
KZ-51
ZS-52
ZS-72
LV-9
LV-12AR
LV-70
LV-73
LV-64
LV-65
LV-67
TS-10
TS-12AU
TS-56
KZ-51
ZS-52
ZS-72
TS-56
KZ-51
ZS-52
ZS-72
0.2433(2)
0.2436(2)
0.2412(2)
0.2414(2)
0.1043(3)
0.1045(3)
0.1053(4)
0.1051(4)
0.1050(4)
0.1038(4)
0.1042(3)
0.1070(2)
0.1077(2)
0.1080(3)
0.1100(2)
0.1115(3)
0.1130(3)
0.2528(7)
0.2532(5)
0.256(1)
0.2565(8)
0.2557(8)
0.2519(6)
0.2549(8)
0.2564(5)
0.2584(5)
0.2584(5)
0.2584(3)
0.2539(4)
0.2534(4)
1/6
1/6
1/6
1/6
1/6
1/6
1/6
1/6
1/6
1/6
1/6
1/6
1/6
-1/6
-1/6
-1/6
-1/6
0.4865(4)
0.4873(4)
0.4824(4)
0.4829(5)
0.2086(6)
0.2091(6)
0.2106(8)
0.2101(7)
0.2101(7)
0.2077(8)
0.2085(7)
0.2140(5)
0.2155(4)
0.2160(6)
0.2201(4)
0.2229(5)
0.2259(5)
0.2528(7)
0.2532(5)
0.256(1)
0.2565(8)
0.2557(8)
0.2519(6)
0.2549(8)
0.2564(5)
0.2584(5)
0.2584(5)
0.2584(3)
0.2539(4)
0.2534(4)
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/6
1/6
1/6
1/6
0.0754(3)
0.0727(3)
0.0682(3)
0.0656(4)
0.1719(3)
0.1724(2)
0.1717(4)
0.1715(4)
0.1720(4)
0.1709(4)
0.1724(3)
0.1744(3)
0.1748(2)
0.1732(3)
0.1751(2)
0.1738(3)
0.1735(3)
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/3
1/6
1/6
1/6
1/6
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
Na0.73
Na0.74
Na0.86
Na0.87
Na0.80
Na0.75
Na0.79
Na0.68
Na0.65
Na0.91
Na0.99
Na
Na0.97
Na0.31
Na0.76
Na0.69
Na0.78
0.0376(9)
0.0318(9)
0.043(1)
0.029(1)
0.083(2)
0.085(2)
0.083(2)
0.080(2)
0.083(2)
0.093(2)
0.078(2)
0.077(1)
0.068(1)
0.066(1)
0.038(1)
0.054(1)
0.038(1)
0.098(2)
0.090(1)
0.012(3)
0.098(3)
0.016(2)
0.082(2)
0.091(2)
0.093(2)
0.078(1)
0.052(1)
0.0312(8)
0.045(1)
0.039(1)
0.041(1)
0.045(1)
0.048(2)
0.049(1)
0.045(2)
0.058(2)
0.044(1)
0.041(1)
0.037(1)
0.049(2)
0.032(1)
0.041(1)
0.021(1)
0.012(3)
0.027(1)
0.039(2)
0.025(2)
O2
O3
B**
85
The structure of lovozerite has been studied by Yamnova et al. (2001a) and rened in the space group R3 to the R1 index of 0.077. Our structure renements of
the samples 9, 12AR, 70, 73, 64, 65, and 67, identied as lovozerite, were success without observation of additional superstructure reecful in the space group R 3m
tions. The R1 indices obtained did not exceed 0.047. At the moment we are unable
to explain the differences between our study and the results reported by Yamnova
et al. (2001a).
The structure of tisinalite was rened by Yamnova et al. (2003) in the space
These authors observed a small number of weak reections not satisfying
group P 3.
the rule of systematic extinction h + k + l = 3n that led them to the conclusion
that primitive cell is preferred for tisinalite. We studied three tisinalite crystals (10,
12AU, and 56) and did not obtain any violations of their structures from the R 3m
symmetry. The disagreement with the results of Yamnova et al. (2003) might be
explained by the obverse-reverse twinning frequently observed for rhombohedral
crystals (Herbstirmer and Sheldrick 2002) and responsible for the reections that
violate the h + k + l = 3n systematic absences rule.
Acknowledgements We thank Swiss National Foundation (SNF) for nancial support of the
collaboration between the Russian and Swiss research groups. Russian authors thank Russian federation Ministry of Science and Education for nancial support through the RNP grant (2.1.1.3077),
Molecular geochemistry and biogeochemistry project of the program Innovative education environment in a classical University and INTAS program for young sciences (05-109-4549).
References
Bruker (1997) SHELXTL, Version 5.1. Bruker AXS Inc, Madison, Wisconsin, USA
Dawson JB, Smith JV, Steele IM (1989) Combeite (Na2.33 Ca1.74 others0.12 )Si3 O9 from Oldoinyo
Lengai, Tanzania. J Geol 97:365372
Fischer RX, Tillmanns E (1983) Die Kristallstrukturen von natuerlichem Na2 Ca2 Si3 O9 vom Mt.
Shaheru (Zaire) und aus dem Mayener Feld (Eifel). Neues Jb Miner Monat 4959
Fischer RX, Tillmanns E (1987) Revised data for combeite Na2 Ca2 Si3 O9 . Acta Crystallogr C
43:18521854
Gerasimovskii VI (1939) Lovozerite a new mineral. Dokl Akad Nauk SSSR A 25:753756
Herbst-Irmer R, Sheldrick G (2002) Renement of obverse/reverse twins. Acta Crystallogr B
58:478481
Ilyukhin VV, Belov NV (1960a) Determination of the structure of lovozerite from sections of
three-dimensional Patterson functions. Kristallograya 5:200214 (in Russian)
Ilyukhin VV, Belov NV (1960b) Crystal structure of lovozerite. Dokl Akad Nauk SSSR 131:
176179 (in Russian)
Kapustin YuL, Pudovkina ZV, Bykova AV, Lyubomilova GV (1974a) Koashvite, a new mineral.
Zapiski VMO 103:559566 (in Russian)
Kapustin YL, Pudovkina ZV, Bykova AV (1974b) Zirsinalite, a new mineral. Zapiski VMO
103:551558 (in Russian)
Kapustin YuL, Pudovkina ZV, Bykova AV (1980) Tisinalite Na3 H3 (Mn,Ca,Fe)TiSi6
(O,OH).18 2H2 O a new mineral of the lovozerite group. Zapiski VMO 109:223229
(in Russian)
86
Khomyakov AP, Semenov EI, Eskova EM, Voronkov AA (1974) Kazakovite, a new mineral from
the lovozerite group. Zapiski VMO 103:342345 (in Russian)
Khomyakov AP, Chernitsova NM, Sandomirskaya SM, Vasileva GL (1979) Imandrite, a new mineral of the lovozerite family. Mineral Zh 1:8993 (in Russian)
Malinovsky YuA, Burzlaff H, Rothammel W (1993) Structures of the lovozerite type a quantitative investigation. Acta Crystallogr B 49:158164
Ohsato H, Maki I, Takeuchi Y (1985) Structure of Na2 CaSi2 O6 . Acta Crystallogr C 41:15751577
Ohsato H, Takeuchi Y (1986) Structure of Na4 Ca4 (Si6 O18 ). Acta Crystallogr C 42:924927
Pekov IV, Ekimenkova IA, Chukanov NV, Zadov AE, Yamnova NA, Egorov-Tismenko YuK (2000)
Litvinskite Na2 (,Na,Mn)Zr[Si6 O12 (OH,O)6 ] a new mineral of the lovozerite group. Zapiski
VMO 129:1:4553 (in Russian)
Pekov IV, Chukanov NV, Yamnova NA, Egorov-Tismenko YuK, Zadov AE (2003) New mineral kapustinite Na5.5 Mn0.25 ZrSi6 O16 (OH)2 from Lovozero massif (Kola Peninsula) and new
data on the genetic crystallochemistry of the lovozerite group. Zapiski VMO 123:6:114 (in
Russian)
Pudovkina ZV, Chernitsova NM, Voronkov AA, Pyatenko YuA (1980) Crystal structure of zirsinalite Na6 Ca(Zr(Si6 O18 ). Dokl Akad Nauk SSSR 250:865867 (in Russian)
Sahama TG, Hytoeonen K (1957) Goetzenite and combeite, two new silicates from the Belgian
Congo. Mineral Mag 31:503510
Voronkov AA, Pudovkina ZV, Blinov VA, Ilyukhin VV, Pyatenko YuA (1979) Crystal structure of
kazakovite Na6 Mn(Ti(Si6 O18 )). Dokl Akad Nauk SSSR 245:106109 (in Russian)
Yamnova NA, Egorov-Tismenko YuK, Pekov IV (2001a) Rened crystal structure of lovozerite
Na2 CaZr[Si6 O12 (OH,O)6 ]. H2 O. Kristallograya 46:10191023 (in Russian)
Yamnova NA, Egorov-Tismenko YuK, Pekov IV, Ekimenkova IA (2001b) Crystal structure of
litvinskite a new natural representative of the lovozerite group. Kristallograya 46:230233
(in Russian)
Yamnova NA, Egorov-Tismenko YuK, Pekov IV, Shchegolkova LV (2003) Crystal structure of
tisinalite Na2 (Mn,Ca)1x (Ti,Zr,Nb,Fe3+ )[Si6 O8 (O,OH)10 ]. Crystallogr Rep 48:551556
Yamnova NA, Egorov-Tismenko YuK, Pekov IV, Shchegolkova LV (2004) The crystal structure
of kapustinite Na5.5 Mn0.25 Zr[Si6 O16 (OH)2 ]: a new mineral of the lovozerite group. Dokl Earth
Sci 397:658662
Terskite Na4 ZrSi6 O16 2H2 O is a zeolite-like zirconosilicate common in the hyperagpaitic pegmatites of the Lovozero alkaline massif (Kola Peninsula, Russia).
The base of its crystal structure is the heteropolyhedral framework formed by
branched innite chains of Si tetrahedra and isolated Zr octahedra (Pudovkina and
Chernitsova, 1991). Extra-framework Na atoms and H2 O molecules are located in
3 . It
the zeolite channels. The framework density is 18.0 Si and Zr atoms per 1000 A
allowed to suppose that the mineral is a potential ion-exchanger.
The cation-exchange properties of terskite were studied on a sample from the
Shkatulka pegmatite located at Mountain Alluaiv in the north-western part of the
Lovozero massif. Its chemical composition is well-corresponding to the formula
above, contents of K and Ca impurities are <0.2 wt.%, contents of Rb, Cs, Sr and
Ba are below detection limits for routine electron microprobe analysis.
Terskite grains with size of 0.52 mm were placed into aqueous solutions of
KCl, RbNO3 , CsNO3 , CaCl2 , SrCl2 and BaCl2 . Two series of experiments were
developed:
(1) In 1N solutions: under room conditions for 2.5 months, at 90 C for 6 hours and
at 150 C for 3 hours.
(2) For the examination of the inuence of different parameters (salt concentration,
temperature, pressure, duration of experiment) on the ion exchange, following
experiments were made:
in 0.01N, 0.1N and 1N KCl and CsNO3 solutions at 20 C for 1 hour and
24 hours;
Arina A. Grigorieva
Faculty of Geology, Moscow State University, 119991 Moscow, Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
Igor V. Pekov
Faculty of Geology, Moscow State University, 119991 Moscow, Russia
Institute of Geochemistry and Analytical Chemistry, 119991 Moscow, Russia
Igor A. Bryzgalov
Faculty of Geology, Moscow State University, 119991 Moscow, Russia
87
88
Rb2 O
Cs2 O
CaO
SrO
BaO
wt.%
20 C
5.710.2
0.323.9
1.221.5
0.57.7
2.712.6
0.219.0
apfu
wt.%
90 C
(0.731.38)
6.18.3
(0.022.13)
7.110.5
(0.050.96)
025.2
(0.050.86)
1.912.7
(0.150.83)
2.216.4
(0.010.85)
0.230.4
apfu
wt.%
150 C
(0.701.08)
10.713.7
(0.340.68)
1.38.6
(1.14)
5.732.9
(0.201.53)
(0.111.10)
2.320.8
(0.011.57)
2.833.5
apfu
(1.341.93)
(0.131.46)
(0.101.77)
(0.080.57)
(0.221.43)
Note: experiment did not work out due to some technical problems. Formulae were calculated
on the basis of 6 Si atoms.
89
K2 O, wt.%
K, apfu
3 hours
90 C
0.1N
3 hours
90 C
0.01N
3 hours
150 C
0.1N, 3/4V
3 hours
150 C
0.01N, 3/4V
3 hours
150 C
0.1N, 1/4V
3 hours
150 C
0.01N, 1/4V
6.912.3
(0.861.66)
3.78.2
(0.461.09)
7.420.8
(0.962.75)
5.810.8
(0.781.62)
9.815.8
(1.212.23)
0.57.1
(0.060.97)
Note: formulae were calculated on the basis of 6 Si atoms. 1/4V and 3/4V means that an autoclave
was lled for 25 and 75 vol.% respectively.
Table 3 Ranges of contents of exchanged K and Cs in terskite at 20 C
1 hour
0.1N
24 hours
0.1N
1 hour
0.01N
24 hours
0.01N
1 hour
1N
24 hours
1N
K2 O wt.%
K, apfu
1.03.7
(0.110.51)
3.910.0
(0.471.39)
1.51.3
(0.230.17)
2.63.9
(0.360.54)
2.07.9
(0.261.11)
0.79.4
(0.091.32)
Cs2 O wt.%
Cs, apfu
0.67.6
(0.250.40)
1.421.9
(0.061.03)
1.56.5
(0.060.32)
2.528.3
(0.101.32)
0.823.2
(0.041.12)
0.423.8
(0.021.19)
Thus, the temperature and the duration are more important for the cation exchange in terskite in dilute solutions than concentrated ones. The maximum contents
of exchanged cations are in cracked and porous areas in all cases.
From the experimental data, we consider that ion-exchange processes can occur
in terskite in nature, under hydrothermal and supergene (taking into account the
result of the experiments at 20 C) conditions.
Terskite, as it was found, is a strong cationite for K, Cs and Ba not only at 90
and 150 C but also under room conditions. This property of the mineral may favor
the use of its synthetic analogue in chemical technologies e.g. for the extraction of
alkaline and earth-alkaline elements (Cs, Ba) from dilute solutions.
Acknowledgements We are grateful to E.V. Guseva for help in SEM study of our samples.
This work was supported by grants of President of Russian Federation MD-7230.2006.5, NSh4964.2006.5 and NSh-4818.2006.5, grant RFBR 06-05-90626-BNTS a and grant of Russian Science Support Foundation (for IVP).
References
Pudovkina ZV, Chernitsova NM (1991) Crystal structure of terskite, Na4 Zr[H4 Si6 O18 ]. Sov Phys
Dokl 36:201203
91
92
93
0.95
vishnevite and
0.9
0.85
Al/Si
0.8
0.75
0.7
C-bearing
cancrinite with
abnormal IRspectra
0.65
0.6
cancrisilite
0.55
0.1
0.05
0.05
Ca+Sr
0.1
0.15
0.2
Fig. 1 Correlation between the Al/Si ratio and contents of bivalent cations (Ca with minor Sr, apfu)
in cancrinite-subgroup minerals from the Lovozero massif
Al/Si
On the basis of the data obtained, we can consider two main schemes of isomorphous substitutions involving framework constituents and extra-framework cations
and anions (located in a wide channel; contents of cancrinite cages is probably
not involved) for cancrinite-subgroup minerals from the KibinyLovozero alkaline
complex.
The cancrinitecancrisilite continuous isomorphous series (Khibiny):
+
+
+
+ Al3+
+ (CO3 )2
Na+ +Si4+
+ (CO3 )2
Ca2+
.
1.1
1.0
1.0
0.9
0.9
0.8
0.8
0.7
0.7
0.6
0.2
0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
Ca+Sr
0.8
1.0
1.2
1.4
hyperagpaitic pegmatites
agpaitic pegmatites
altered urtite
Fig. 2 Correlation between the Al/Si ratio and contents of bivalent cations (Ca with minor Sr, apfu)
in cancrinite-subgroup minerals from the Khibiny massif
94
+
+
+Si4+
+
+ (CO3 )2
+ H2 O Na+ + Al3+
+ 2 (OH) .
Acknowledgements We are grateful to M.F. Vigasina for help in the IR study the samples
and N.V. Chukanov for discussion. This work was supported by grants of President of Russian
Federation MD-7230.2006.5, NSh-4964.2006.5 and NSh-4818.2006.5, grant RFBR 06-05-90626BNTS a and grant of Russian Science Support Foundation (for IVP).
References
Bonaccorsi E, Merlino S (2005) Modular microporous minerals: cancrinitedavyne group and
CSH phases. Rev Mineral Geochem 57:241290
95
96
97
Organova et al. (1980) considered problems of order and disorder in labuntsovitegroup minerals and classied diffraction patterns obtained from them into:
(1) patterns that have only sharp superstructure reections corresponding to
(2) patterns that have only sharp reections with a unit cell of c 7.75 A in the space
group C2/m;
but
(3) patterns that have sharp reections indexable in a unit cell with c 7.75 A
with additional diffuse reections streaked along a* that indicates the presence
of thin layered domains parallel to (100); ordered domains of the labuntsovite
structure have shifted to each other by c/2 and can be indexed in the I2/m unit
cell; the thinner the domains, the more diffuse the respective reections.
There is also another description of this phenomenon based upon the results
obtained using modern techniques (Armbruster et al. 2004). The latter reference
contains interesting results about structures of two labuntsovites (Fig. 3) with
Fig. 3 Left: Reconstructed 0kl reciprocal space plots for labuntsovite crystals displaying sharp
and diffuse layers at c*/2
X-ray refections indicating a C2/m average structure with c = 7.75 A
intervals fullling conditions of an I-centered superlattice. Right: reconstructed hk0 and hk1 reciprocal space plots for labuntsovite crystal. Reproduced from Armbruster et al. (2004)
98
reconstructed 0kl, 1kl, hk0, hk1 reciprocal space plots. From the 0kl plots, one can
derive for labuntsovites the monoclinic space group I2/m. Diffusion reections are
probably related to the thickness of ordered domains that can be determined by
comparison of reection length with distance between neighbouring sharp coordinate reections along axis. In this case we have domains with approximate thickness
of about 2 nm.
In the hk2n + 1 plot (Fig. 3, right), the same crystals of labuntsovite have only
doubled and diffuse reections along X . According to Guinier (1961), such pictures
are generated by a smooth change of electron density along the X axis. According to
Fig. 4, such a change has a period of about 20 nm and might be correlated with the
conditions of crystal growth from hydrothermal solutions. The smooth and periodic
Fig. 4 Connection between real and reciprocal space by smoothing one dimensional change of
density (Guinier 1961)
99
lemmleinite-Ba
labuntsovite-Mn
Fig. 6 Successive
alternation of lemmleinite
Ba and labuntsovite
Mn in the structure of
ordered labuntsovite-group
mineral. Reproduced from
Zolotarev (2007)
lemmleinite-Ba
labuntsovite-Mn
100
References
Armbruster T, Krivovichev SV, Weber T, Gnos E, Organova NI, Yakovenchuk VN, Shlyukova ZV
(2004) Origin of diffuse superstructure reections in labuntsovite-group minerals. Am Mineral
89:16551667
Chukanov NV, Pekov IV, Zadov AT, Voloshin AV, Subbotin VV, Rastsvetaeva RK, Sorochtina
NV, Krivovichev SV (2003) Minerals of the Labunstovite group. Nauka, Moscow, p 323 (in
Russian)
Golovastikov NI (1973) Crystal structure of of the alkali titanosilicate labuntsovite. Kristalograya
18:950955 (in Russian)
Guinier A (1961) Theorie et Techigue de la Radiocristallographie. Gos Izdatelstvo Fiz-Mat Lit
Russian translation, Moscow
Milton C, Mrose ME, Fahey JI (1958) Labuntsovite from the trona mine, Seawater Counntry,
Wioming. Bull Geol Soc Am 64:16141615
Organova NI, Archipenko DR, Dikov JuP, Karpinsky OG, Shlyukova ZV (1981) Structure particularities of new K-variety of labuntsovite and its place in the labuntsovite-nenadkevichite family.
Mineral Zh 2:4963
Organova NI, Shlyukova ZV, Tsepin A (1980) Crystal chemistry of disorder in labuntsovites.
In: Shadlun TN (ed) Uporjadochenie I Raspad Tverdjuch Rastvorov v Mineralach. Nauka,
Moscow, pp 3957 (in Russian)
Organova NI, Shlyukova ZV, Zabavnikova NI (1976) On crystal chemistry of labuntsovite and
nenadkevichite. Izv Acad Nauk SSSR Geol 2:98116 (in Russian)
Semenov EI, Burova TA (1955) On a new mineral labuntsovite and so-called titanium elpidite.
Dokl Akad Nauk SSSR 101:11131116 (in Russian)
Zolotarev AA (2007) Crystal Chemistry of Minerals of the Lovozerite and Labuntsovite Groups.
Candidate of Sciences Dissertation, Resume, St. Petersburg State University
Zolotarev AA, Krivovichev SV, Yakovenchuk VN, Pakhomovsky YaA, Organova NI, Armbruster T
(2006) High degree of cation ordering in structure of a new member of labuntsovite group. Dokl
Ross Akad Nauk 410:8690
For the most part, the rocks are formed by oxosalts minerals containing complex
acid anionic radicals, rst of all silicate, but also phosphate, carbonate, borate, sulfate, etc. Statistical data on chemical compositions of minerals show that amphoteric
elements (rst row of transition metals, aluminum, beryllium, zinc, zirconium, niobium and some others) are typical for most cases. Depending on the conditions of
crystal genesis the amphoteric complexes can act as the cationic part of the crystal
structure or as another species of anions besides the usual acid tetrahedral groups.
In other words, in combination with acid complex anions like [SiO4 ]4 , [PO4 ]3 ,
[SO4 ]2 , [BO4 ]5 amphoteric metal complexes can form mixed anionic networks
with alkali or organic cations inside the channels or pores. The chemical composition and P/T conditions of system during crystallization are the most important
criteria dening the way of amphoteric metal behavior in a specic physicochemical situation.
The multivalued crystal chemical function of cations i.e., to behave amphoterically is well known in chemistry. The ability of some cations to be converted
into complex anions under conditions of high alkalinity of agpaite pegmatites
has even been noticed by Fersman in his fundamental monograph Pegmatites
(Fersman 1940) and other papers published in connection with his famous
Kolskii expeditions. Just with alkaline rocks, mineral deposits with active role
of beryllo- titano- zircono-silicates, alumino- ferri- ferro- and mangano-phosphates
are related. A detailed mineralogo-geochemical analysis of alkaline rocks was presented in studies of E.I. Semenov (1972), A.P. Khomyakov (1990), A.V. Voloshin
and Ya.A. Pakhomovskii (1986) and I.V. Pekov (2005). A crystal chemical assignment of minerals from the alkaline complexes based on the extraction of mixed radicals of octahedra and tetrahedra was made in works (Pyatenko et al. 1976, Voronkov
et al. 1978), where the main types of mixed anionic titanosilicate and zirconosilicate
constructions from one dimensional to 3D frameworks were demonstrated.
Olga V. Yakubovich
Moscow State Lomonosov University, Moscow, Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
101
102
O.V. Yakubovich
103
polyhedra to 2.060 A in the Fe(3) polyhedron. The shared faces of octahedra are
the main specic feature of the lipscombite structure and suggest unusual physical properties of this mineral. The distances between iron atoms in columns are
(Fe(2)Fe(3)), 2.623(1) A
(Fe(3)Fe(4)), 2.673(1) A
(Fe(4)Fe(1)), and
2.769(1) A
2.514(1) A (Fe(1)Fe(2)). It is likely that such small values of the FeFe distances
104
O.V. Yakubovich
b
a
Fe3
Fe2
Fe3
Fe4
Fe1
Fe2
are responsible for the electronic transitions of the Fe2+ + Fe3+ Fe3+ + Fe2+
type, strong absorption, black color of the crystals (Moore 1970) and expected magnetic properties. This nearness of iron atoms to each other and their tendency to
avoid direct contact explain the void defects in the octahedral columns (where three
of four octahedra are statistically occupied by iron atoms) and the impossibility of
the existence of the ordered Fe2+ -containing end member Fe2+8 (PO4 )4 (OH)4 with
completely occupied octahedral positions (Gheith 1953).
Hydrothermally reworked phosphates from granite pegmatites that have been
carefully discussed by Moore (1973), are built by less coherent structures. On the
initial stage of the process amphotheric complexes still can act as cations only (whitmoreite, augelite). More often, however, amphoteric metals here perform both the
cationic and the anion-former functions, if the primary minerals transformation occurs without the activity of Na or K (or ammonium playing the crystal chemical
role of alkaline metals in hypergene conditions). Minerals of this third group are:
strunzite, laueite, paravauxite, sigloite, pseudolaueite, stewartite, to name a few.
Usually, the process of a transition metal oxidation proceeds stepwise; therefore,
at a lower degree of oxidation the transition metal plays the cationic role, while the
higher oxidized ion forms the mixed anionic radical together with PO4 tetrahedra.
Laueite [Mn2+ (H2 O)4 ]{Fe3+
2 (OH)2 (H2 O)2 (PO4 )2 }(H2 O)2 , isotypic with minerals
gordonite [Mg(H2 O)4 ]{Al2 (OH)2 (H2 O)2 (PO4 )2 }(H2 O)2 , and paravauxite [Fe2+
(H2 O)4 ]{Al2 (OH)2 (H2 O)2 (PO4 )2 }(H2 O)2 , is formed likewise: 2D anionic constructions formed by chains of vertice-sharing Fe3+ octahedra, and P tetrahedra that
link the octahedral chains in the layers, alternate with layers of isolated (i.e., without direct contents with other octahedra) Mn2+ octahedra. As one can see from the
105
crystal chemical formulae of the discussed minerals, the cationic function of Mg2+
in gordonite is played by Mn and Fe at the lowest oxidation state in laueite and paravauxite respectively. During the progressive process of oxidation the paravauxite
can be converted to sigloite [Fe3+ (H2 O, OH)4 ]{Al2 (OH)2 (H2 O)2 (PO4 )2 }(H2 O)2
(Hawthorne 1988) without fundamental structural transformation. It means that in
certain geochemical situations the transition metal even at the highest state of oxidation might form the cationic part of the crystal structure.
One more case is common for secondary pegmatite phosphates. If different amphotheric metals occur in one mineral, then the less electronegative ion forms the
cationic part of the crystal structure. This case may be illustrated by the crystal
structure of phosphophyllite [Fe(H2 O)4 ]{Zn2 (PO4 )2 } (Thomas and Weller 1992),
where the mixed anionic layers of vertice-sharing ZnO4 and PO4 tetrahedra alternate with layers of isolated Fe2+ octahedra. For Zn phosphates the crystal structures
of the third type are representative enough (hopeite, parahopeite, kipushite, veszelyite, etc.). They consist of two types of layers, differing in geometry and chemistry.
The rst cationic layer is built of Zn (or Zn and Cu) octahedra; the second anionic layer is formed by vertice-sharing Zn and P tetrahedra.
The phosphates containing signicant amounts of alkaline cations (the second
group) have zeolite-like microporous architecture. In the alkaline conditions of mineral genesis (agpaitic pegmatites, hydrothermalites, etc.) the alkaline metals quantitatively dominate in the system of crystallization. One of the most effective ways
of their deposition as a solid phase in peralkaline aluminosilicate systems where
Al turns out in a relative decit, is the formation of titano(niobo)- and zirconosilicates, as shown by Yu. A. Pyatenko (1987). According to our experimental results
(Yakubovich and Urusov 1996), in a high alkalinity of the phosphate system Fe3+ ,
Fe2+ , Mn2+ , Zn2+ cations help P5+ in the crystallization of alkaline phases with
mixed anionic radicals. These anionic radicals can be formed as by octahedra around
amphotheric metal sharing vertices with acid PO4 tetrahedra, or by different kinds
of tetrahedral oxo-complexes as well. In the alkaline systems of our experiments we
received many new phosphates of this type that often represent structural varieties
of known minerals (leucophosphite, tinsleite, minyulite, pharmacosiderite, natisite,
cancrinite, ect.).
For example, a synthetic phase {[Rb1.94 (H2 O,OH)3.84 ](H2 O)0.1 }{Al4 (OH)4
[PO4 ]3 } (Yakubovich et al., 2008) belongs to the pharmacosiderite structure type
K{Fe4 (OH)4 [AsO4 ].3 6H2 O and represents the rst aluminophosphate in the group
of minerals and synthetic analogues in question. (Fig. 2). This structure type proved
to be stable enough to form of many phases different in chemical composition on
its basis: ferri- and aluminoarsenates, germinates, titanosilicates, molybdenophosphates and some others (Table 1). The main difference between these compounds
consists in chemical lling of the mixed anionic 3D framework of octahedra (occupied by larger cations) and tetrahedra (occupied by smaller cations). All alkaline
cations from Li+ to Cs+ and also Tl+ , H+ and (NH4 )+ are now in the voids of
these frameworks; and their absorption characteristics permit the allocation of four
cations per formula unit besides water molecules also incorporated by open channel
of these crystal structures.
106
O.V. Yakubovich
O3
O4
Rb
P
Al
O2
O1
H
The analysis of Table 1 data allowed us to dene the main crystal chemical factor that determines the stability of this structure type despite the noticed diversity of
chemical compositions. This factor is the ratio of charges of the cations in octahedral
and tetrahedral surroundings that provides a local bond valence on oxygen atoms
of the framework. Thus, for Fe3+ /As5+ , Al3+ /As5+ Al3+ /P5+ cation pairs, the
local bond valence is maintained when hydroxyl groups at the vertices of the framework octahedra that are not shared with tetrahedral, form. This situation is described
by general formula of the anionic framework {M 3+4 (OH)4 [T 5+ O4 ]3 } (M
octahedral cations, T tetrahedral cations). In the case when the octahedral positions are populated by transition metals in 4+ oxidation state, the local bond
valence on the framework oxygen atoms is observed if the tetrahedral cations have
the same 4+ charge (Ti4+ /Si4+ , Ge4+ /Ge4+ ), and the framework formula transforms
into {M 4+4 O4 [T 4+ O4 ]3 }4 . For the pair Mo3.5+ /P5+ according to [2, 18] this
formula looks like: {M 3.5+ 4 O4 [T 5+ O4 ]3 }3 .
As can be seen from the shown formulae (Table 1), the change of framework
charge one of the key parameters that regulate absorption and selective properties
of this type of compounds is a direct consequence of variations of the framework
composition. The second key parameter is the effective diameter of framework windows, and it is dened by the octahedra and tetrahedra sizes (edge lengths) (Fig. 2),
which in their turn depend on the radius values of cations occupying these polyhedra. Such crystal structure topology when the cubic unit cell parameter is approximately equal to the sum of three MO distances and one OO distance (corresponds
to the edge lengh of the tetrahedron) characterizes the size of the framework windows. In other words, the larger the cubic unit cell parameter of the compound
crystallizing in the pharmacosiderite structure type, the large the effective diameter
of the micropores.
Therefore, the absorption ability of this kind of compounds should grow with the
increase of the frameworks negative charge and with the augmentation of the sizes
of the cations forming this framework. It seems that it is possible to move in the direction of the enlargement of both of these parameters until a certain limit (for same
107
Table 1 Crystal chemical data for pharmacosiderite type compounds (sp. gr. P43m,
Z = 1)
No
Anionic framework
formula
(min max), A
Rb+ , OH , H2 O
7.4931(6)
Yakubovich et al.
(in press)
K+ , H2 O
7.72 7.745(1)
NIST/FIZ (2007)
7.93 7.9816(5)
NIST/FIZ (2007)
H+ ,
K+ ,
Na+ ,
Ba2+ ,
H2 O
4
{Ge4 O4 [GeO4 ]3 }4
H+ , Li+ , K+ , Tl+ ,
+
+
NH+
4 , Rb , Cs ,
H2 O
7.6699(1) 7.74
NIST/FIZ (2007)
{Mo4 O4 [PO4 ]3 }3
Cs+ , NH+
4
7.728(4) 7.736(2)
NIST/FIZ (2007)
{Ti4 O4 [SiO4 ]3 }4
H+ , K+ , Cs+ , H2 O
7.7644(3) 7.8214(6)
NIST/FIZ (2007)
{(Ti,Ge)4 O4
H+ , Cs+ , H2 O
7.8577(2) 8.0237(2)
NIST/FIZ (2007)
{(Ti,Nb)4 O4 [SiO4 ]3 }3
H+ , Cs+ , H2 O
[(Ge,Si)O4 ]3 }4
8
structure type). This fact is illustrated on Fig. 3, where real and hypothetic compositions of the pharmacosiderite type frameworks without isomorphous defects are
shown. Thus, the unit cell parameter and the negative charge of the framework grow
simultaneously on the way from point 1 to point 6 (Table 1). Further increase of both
108
O.V. Yakubovich
octahedral and tetrahedral cation sizes leads to the composition of mineral pharmacosiderite (point 3) having smaller framework charge equal to 1. The compositions
of the hypothetic phases on Fig. 3 have been chosen on the basis of the crystal chemical factors and the probable radiation stability of the microporous frameworks. The
largest pore size should be expected in the compound with mixed anionic framework
built by In3+ octahedra and V5+ tetrahedra; the charge of this framework should be
equal to 1. By varying the pore sizes and the value of the framework negative
charge in the course of a chemical design it is possible, in principle, to get the
compounds with high selectivity to one or another cation. Absorption characteristics of their pharmacosiderite type frameworks with low negative charge could be
augmented in case if the pores absorb the cations and coordinating anions together.
This effect was observed in the crystal structure of the new pharmacosiderite type
aluminophosphate {[Rb1.94 (H2 O,OH)3.84 ](H2 O)0.1 }{Al4 (OH)4 [PO4 ]3 }, where the
microporous 1 charged framework is able to absorb about two Rb2+ cations together with the coordinating OH groups.
References
Fisher DG (1973) Geochemistry of phosphorus containing minerals. In: Grifth E, Beeton A,
Spenser J (eds) Environmental phosphorus handbook. Wiley, New York
Fransolet A-M, Antenucci D, Speetjeus J-M, Tarte P (1984) An X-ray determinative method for
the divalent cation ratio in the triphylite-lithiophilit series. Mineral Mag 40:373378
Gheith MA (1953) Lipscombite, a new synthetic iron lazulite. Am Mineral 38:612628
Hawthorne FC (1988) Sigloite: the oxidation mechanism in (M2 (III)(PO4 )2 (OH)2 (H2 O)2 )2 structures. Miner Petrol 38:201211
Kampf AR (1982) The phosphate mineralogy of the Palermo pegmatite. In: Brown GE (ed) The
mineralogy of pegmatites, vol 67:12. Am Mineral, pp 180189
Karimova OV, Yakubovich OV, Urusov VS (1997) Crystal chemical function of zinc in the structures of phosphates. Moscow University Geology Bulletin 52:6:3545
Keller P, Von Knorring O (1989) Pegmatites at the Okatjimukuju farm, Karibib, Namibia. Part. 1:
Phosphate mineral associations of the Clementine II pegmatit. Eur J Mineral 1:4:567593
Khomjakov AP (1990) Mineralogy of ultraagpaite alkaline rocks. Nauka, Moscow (in Russian)
Moore PB (1970) Crystal chemistry of the basic iron phosphates. Am Mineral 55:135169
Moore PB (1973) Pegmatite phosphates: descriptive mineralogy and crystal chemistry. Mineral
Rec 4:103130
Moore PB (1984) Crystallochemical aspects of the phosphate minerals. In: Nriagu JO, Moore PB
(eds) Phosphate Minerals. Springer, Berlin Heidelberg New York Tokyo, pp 155170
Mucke A (1981) The paragenesis of the phosphate minerals of the Hagendorf pegmatite a general
view. Chem Erde 40:3:217237
NIST/FIZ, Inorganic Crystal Structure Database (2007) part 1
Pekov IV (2005) Genetic mineralogy and crystal chemistry of rare elements in high-alkaline postmagmatic systhems (thesis). Moscow
Pyatenko YuA (1987) About specic group of water containing aluminosilicates, stable in natural
ultrabasic conditions (crystal chemical aspect). Geokhimiya 8:1208213
Pyatenko YuA, Voronkov AA, Pudovkina ZV (1976) Mineralogical crystal chemistry of titanium.
Nauka, Moscow (in Russian)
Sandomirskii PA, Belov NV (1984) Crystal chemistry of mixed anionic radicals (in Russian)
Semenov EI (1972) Mineralogy of Lovozero alkaline massif. Nauka, Moscow (in Russian)
109
Shigley JE, Brown GE (1986) Lithiophilite formation in granitic pegmatites: a reconnaissance experimental study of phosphate crystallization from hydrous aluminosilicate melts. Am Mineral
71:356366
Thomas IM, Weller MT (1992) Synthesis, structure and thermal properties of phosphophyllite,
Zn2 Fe(PO4 ).2 4(H2 O). J Mater Chem 2:11231126
Voloshin AV, Pakhomovskii YaA (1986) Minerals and mineral evolution in amazonite pegmatites
of Kolskii peninsula. Nauka, Leningrad (in Russian)
Voronkov AA, Shumjatskaja NG, Pyatenko YuA (1978) Crystal chemistry of zirconium minerals
and their synthetic analogues. Nauka, Moscow (in Russian)
Yakubovich OV, Urusov VS (1996) The genetic crystal chemistry of pegmatite phosphates.
Moscow University Geology Bulletin 51:2:1840
Yakubovich OV, Massa W, Dimitrova OV (2008) A novel representative in the pharmacosiderite
structure type. Crystallogr Rep 53:3
Yakubovich OV, Steele IM, Rusakov VS, Urusov VS (2006) Hole defects in the crystal structure
of synthetic lipscombite (Fe2+ 2.3 Fe3+ 4.7 )[PO4 ]4 O2.7 (OH)1.3 , and genetic crystal chemistry of
minerals of the lipscombite-barbosalite series. Crystallogr Rep 51:401411
Stanislav K. Filatov
Department of Crystallography, St. Petersburg State University, St. Petersburg, Russia,
e-mail: [email protected]
Rimma S. Bubnova
Institute of Silicate Chemistry of Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg, Russia,
e-mail: [email protected]
111
112
(3) Triangles, tetrahedra, and rigid groups polymerize with each other to form nite
boron-oxygen complex anions and innite chain, layer and framework anions.
Existence of two types of B coordination polyhedra is the determining factor
for a formation of a unique variety of anion groups characteristic exclusively
for borates and not present in silicates built up from TO4 tetrahedra solely or
carbonates built up from TO3 triangles etc.
Application of borate-based materials at elevated temperatures and their crystal growth require knowledge of their crystal structures and their correlation with
physical properties, in particular, with anisotropy of their thermal expansion.
113
greatly anisotropic thermal expansion, including linear negative thermal expansion, unusual rst-order phase transitions without change of a space-group type,
sometimes singular points on temperature dependence of unit cell parameters
close to the glass transition temperature, etc.
(5) Thermal expansion of borates decreases with increase of metal-oxygen chemical
bonds, i.e. with increase of a valence of charge-compensating cations and the
decrease of their size.
(6) It can be expected that a number of triangularly coordinated boron atoms in borates increases on heating. This is testied by investigations of borate melts, i.e.,
it is known that a number of triangularly coordinated boron atoms increases on
heating.
(7) Thermal expansion of borate crystals is more intensive than thermal expansion
of borate glasses of the same chemical composition.
So, unusual thermal behaviour of borates is considered herein as the result of
formation of borate crystal structures from rigid B-O groups. The reason of a considerable anisotropy of borate thermal deformations is due to thermal invariability
of rigid boron-oxygen groups and their mutual rotation around common oxygen
atoms, by a shear mechanism (monoclinic and triclinic crystals) and hinge mechanism (crystals of any symmetry). Simultaneous expansion of crystal lattice along
certain directions and compression along others can be explained as a result of
shears and hinges.
114
115
References
Becker P (2001) A contribution to borate crystal chemistry: rules for the occurrence of polyborate
anion types. Z Kristallogr 216:523533
Bokij GB, Kravchenko VB (1966) Crystal chemical classication of borates (in Russian). Zh Strukt
khim 7:920937
Christ CL (1960) Crystal chemistry and systematic classication of hydrated borate minerals. Am
Mineral 45:334340
Christ CL, Clark JR (1977) A crystal-chemical classication of borate structures with emphasis on
hydrated borates. Phys Chem Miner 2:5987
Emme H, Huppertz H (2003) High-pressure preparation, crystal structure, and properties of (RE)2 B4 O9 (RE = Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy): oxoborates displaying a new type of structure with edgesharing BO4 tetrahedra. Chem Eur J 9:36233633
Filatov SK, Bubnova RS (2000) Borate crystal chemistry. Phys Chem Glasses 41:216224
Hawthorne FC, Burns PC, Grice JD (1996) The crystal chemistry of Boron. Rev Miner 33:41116
Hazen RM, Finger LW (1982) Comparative crystal chemistry: temperature, pressure, compositic
and variation of the crystal structure. John Wiley & Sons, London
Huppertz H (2003) High-Pressure Preparation, Crystal Structure, and Properties of RE4 B6 O15
(RE = Dy, Ho) with an Extension of the Fundamental Building Block-Descriptors.
Z Naturforsch B 58:278290
Huppertz H, Eltz B (2002) Multianvil high-pressure synthesis of Dy4 B6 O15 : the rst oxoborate
with edge-sharing BO4 tetrahedra. J Am Chem Soc 124:9376
Krogh-Moe J (1962) Structural interpretation of melting point depression in the sodium borate
system. J Phys Chem Glasses 3:101110
Krogh-Moe J (1965) Interpretation of the infra-red spectra of boron oxide and alkali borate glasses
Phys Chem Glasses 6:4654
Sennova NA, Bubnova RS, Shepelev JuF, Filatov SK, Yakovleva OI (2007) Li2 B4 O7 Crystal structure in anharmonic approximation at 20, 200, 400 and 500 C. J Alloy Compd 428:290296
Shepelev YuF, Bubnova RS, Filatov SK, Sennova NA, Pilneva NA (2005) LiB3 O5 crystal structure
at 20, 227 and 377 C. J Solid State Chem 178:29872997
Tennyson C (1963) Eine Systematik der Borate auf kristallchemischer Grundlage. Fortschr Mineral
41:6491
Zachariasen WH (1938) The crystal structure of Potassium Acid Dihydronium Pentaborate
KH2 (H3 O)2 B5 O10. Z Kristallogr 98:266274
Zachariasen WH, Ziegler GE (1932) The crystal structure of calcium metaborate, CaB2 O4 . Z
Kristallogr 83:354361
Traditionally, alkali borosilicate systems are used as a source for borosilicate glass
production (Cable 2005). Borosilicate glasses are far stronger than soft silicate
glass and have been used for everything from cookware to nuclear waste containment. A mixed alkali borosilicate glass is currently used as a wasteform for the vitrication of high level nuclear waste (Ewing et al. 1995; Plodinec 2000). In this
connection there are numerous investigations of borosilicate glass structure and
properties. On the other side borosilicate crystalline materials are studied poorly.
Since most known crystalline borosilicates are structurally similar to aluminosilicates (leucite family, feldspars, zeolites and others) well known for their properties,
the preparation and investigation of new borosilicate materials is of technological
interest.
Comparing to the similar aluminosilicate the number of the compounds in ternary
alkali borosilicate systems R2 OB2 O3 SiO2 with large alkali cation R = K, Rb,
Cs is very limited. Except boroleucite compounds RBSi2 O6 (R = K (Ihara and
Kamei, 1980), Rb (Voldan 1981), Cs (Richerson and Hummel 1972)) in the ternary
R2 OB2 O3 SiO2 (R = K, Rb, Cs) there are the structural data on hydrotermally
prepared compound KBSi3 O8 (Kimata 1993) isostructural to danburite and natural mineral lisitsynite, KBSi2 O6 , reported in (Sokolova et al. 2001) as boroleucite
polymorph. Additionally there are XRD data for some low temperature potassium
borosilicates (Polyakova 2000 and references therein) and presumably metastable
low temperature polymorph of CsBSi2 O6 (Huebner et al. 2000) but their structures have not been solved. Last years the boroleucite RBSi2 O6 (R = K, Rb, Cs)
Maria G. Krzhizhanovskaya
Department of Crystallography, St. Petersburg State University, St. Petersburg, Russia,
e-mail: [email protected]
Rimma S. Bubnova
Institute of Silicate Chemistry of Russian Academy of Science, St. Petersburg, St. Petersburg
Russia
Stanislav K. Filatov
Department of Crystallography, St. Petersburg State University, St. Petersburg, Russia
117
118
stoichimetry has been studied widely by us. RbBSi2 O6 structure, isostructural with
KBSi2 O6 (Ihara and Kamei, 1980), was rened in the I-43d space group using XRD
powder data (Bubnova et al. 2000; Krzhizhanovskaya et al. 2003). According to single crystal data Cs-decient boropollucite, CsBSi2 O6 , crystallizes in the Ia3d space
group (Bubnova 2004).
All of the compounds RBSi2 O6 (R = K, Rb, Cs) are structurally similar to the
high-temperature cubic leucites. The I-43d boroleucite framework composed of
statistically distributed boron- and silica-oxygen tetrahedra linked into 4-, 6- and
8-fold rings is presented in Fig. 1a. Both I-43d and Ia3d frameworks are practically identical: the difference in the number of crystallographically non-equivalent
oxygens in the structure (two for I-43d and one for Ia3d structure) leads to realizing of slightly different types of (B,Si)O-rings (Fig. 1b) although the structural
topology does not change. In the K, Rb, Cs-boroleucite structures the alkali cation
columns ll the innite channels formed by 6-fold rings along the [111] direction
(see Fig. 3a). The structure transformations of mixed KCs and RbCs boroleucites
are presented as a function of chemical composition and temperature in Bubnova
et al. (2002) Krzhizhanovskaya et al. (2006), respectively. The Rietveld renement
of solid solutions demonstrates that the phases with a high content of smaller alkali
atoms (K, Rb) crystallize in the cubic I-43d space group, wherever the boroleucites
with a considerable Cs content have Ia3d symmetry. K and Rb can substitute Cs in a
wide range of compositions although a narrow range of immiscibility was revealed
near the middles if the rows.
Under the substitution of a smaller alkali atom by a larger Cs the cubic lattice
parameter (Fig. 2a), the RO distances, and the angles between tetrahedra of the
I-43d phase change clearly, while those of the Ia3d phase change slightly.
Thermal behavior of boroleucite structures has been studied using hightemperature X-ray diffraction (HTXRD), dilatometry and DTA (DSC) methods.
Fig. 1 The structure of RBSi2 O6 (R=K, Rb, Cs) boroleucite. The example of complete framework
is shown for I-43d structure realized in RBSi2 O6 , R=K, Rb, (the marked 4-fold rings are crystallographically independent). For Ia3d CsBSi2 O6 structure the tetrahedral rings are presented only
119
Fig. 2 RbBSi2 O6 boroleucite cell parameter as a function of chemical composition (a) and temperature from HTXRD (b) or dilatometry (c) data
Comparing to the natural leucite and pollucite boron-exchanged compounds represent lower melting points and lower thermal expansion coefcients. For example the thermal expansion coefcient calculated using the data from Palmer
et al. (1997) for high-temperature cubic RAlSi2 O6 (R = K, Rb, Cs) are 14, 7 and
4 106 C1 correspondingly, wherever those of the same B-exchanged phases
are 10, 6 and 2 106 C1 . Similar to aluminosilicate systems it is shown that
Cs-rich boroleucites belonged to the highest known for leucite symmetry Ia3d represent the lowest thermal expansion in the studied KCs and RbCs rows (Bubnova
et al. 2002; Krzhizhanovskaya et al. 2006). The cell parameter dependence on chemical composition looks similar to that on heating (Fig. 2). Thus the substitution of a
smaller atom by a larger Cs one and the heating gives rise to the same change of the
cell parameter and presumably to the same structure transformations.
Varying the chemical composition we obtained about a dozen of mixed
boroleucites with a diversity of thermal expansion coefcients from near the zero
up to 25 106 C1 . The determination of the linear thermal expansion coefcients using two different approaches, HTXRD and dilatometry, for micro- (a crystal
structure) and macro- (a pressed tablet) objects shows that the results are comparable to each other (Fig. 2b and c) (Krzhizhanovskaya et al. 2007b). Thus for studied
Fig. 3 High-temperature decomposition of boropollucite CsBSi2 O6 (a) into CsBSi5 O12 borosilicate of CAS zeolite type (b)
120
121
References
Araki T (1980) Crystal structure of a cesium alumosilicate, CsAlSi5 O12 . Z Kristallogr 152:
207209
Bubnova RS, Krzhizhanovskaya MG, Filatov SK, Ugolkov VL, Pauer P (2007) XRD and DSC
study of the formation and the melting of a new zeolite like borosilicate CsBSi5 O12 and
(Cs,Rb)BSi5 O12 solid solutions. Z Kristallogr 222:8386
Bubnova RS, Levin AA, Stepanov NK, Belger A, Meyer DC, Polyakova IG, Filatov SK, Pauer
P (2002) Crystal structure of K1x Csx BSi2 O6 (x=0.12, 0.50) boroleucite solid solutions and
thermal behaviour of KBSi2 O6 and K0.5 Cs0.5 BSi2 O6 . Z Kristallogr 217:5562
Bubnova RS, Polyakova IG, Krzhizhanovskaya MG, Filatov SK, Pauer P, Meyer DC (2000)
Structure-density relationship for crystals and glasses in the Rb2 OB2 O3 SiO2 system. Phys
Chem Glasses 41(6):389391
Bubnova RS, Stepanov NK, Levin AA, Filatov SK, Pauer, Meyer DC (2004) Crystal structure
and thermal behaviour of boropollucite CsBSi2 O6 . Solid State Sci 6:629637
Cable M. (2005) Classical glass technology. In: Zarzyeki J (ed) Material science and technology, vol 9, Glasses and Amorphous Materials. Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co, Weinheim,
Germany, pp 385
Ewing RC, Webert WJ, Clinard FWJr (1995) Radiation effects in nuclear waste forms for highlevel radioactive waste. Prog Nucl Energ 29(2):63121
Huebner R, Belger A, Meyer DC, Pauer P, Polyakova IG (2002) Crystallisation of caesium
borosilicate glasses with approximate boroleucite composition. Z Kristallogr 217:223232
Ihara M, Kamei F (1980) Crystal structure of potassium borosilicate, K2 O B2 O3 4SiO2 . Nippon
Seram Kyo Gak 88:3234
Kimata M (1993) Crystal structure of KBSi3 08 isostructural with danburite. Mineral Mag 57:
157164
Krzhizhanovskaya MG, Bubnova RS, Depmeier W, Filatov SK (2007a) Crystal structure and thermal behavior of a new borosilicate of CAS zeolite type. Book of Abstr XVI Intern Conf On
Crystal Chemistry and Diffraction Studies of Minerals. Miass, Russia:223224
Krzhizhanovskaya MG, Bubnova RS, Filatov SK, Meyer DC, Pauer P (2003) Crystal structure transformation in Rb-boroleucite solid solutions from powder diffraction data. Glass Phys
Chem 29:827838 (in Russian)
Krzhizhanovskaya MG, Bubnova RS, Filatov SK, Meyer DC, Pauer P (2006) Crystal structure
and thermal behaviour of (Rb,Cs)BSi2 O6 solid solutions. Cryst Res Technol 41:285292
Krzhizhanovskaya MG, Bubnova RS, Ugolkov VL, Filatov SK (2007b) Thermal behaviour and
polymorphism of RbCs boroleucites from powder X-ray diffraction and dilatometry data.
Glass Phys Chem 33:341350 (in Russian)
Palmer DC, Dove MT, Ibberson RM, Powell AM (1997) Structural behavior, crystal chemistry,
and phase transitions in substituted leucite: high-resolution neutron powder diffraction studies.
Am Mineral 82:1629
Plodinec MJ (2000) Borosilicate glasses for nuclear waste immobilization. Glass Technol 41:
186193
Polyakova IG (2000) Alkali borosilicate systems: phase diagrams and properties of glasses. Phys
Chem Glasses 41:247258
Renzo FD, Derewinski M, Chiari G, P1evert J, Driole M-F, Fajula F, Schulz Ph (1996) Insertion
of boron in tectosilicate frameworks in the presence of large alkali cations. Micropor Mater
6:151157
Richerson DW, Hummel FA (1972) Synthesis and thermal expansion of polycrystalline cesium
minerals. J Am Ceram Soc 55:269273
Sokolova EV, Hawthorne FC, Khomyakov AP (2001) The crystal chemistry of malinkoite,
NaBSiO4 , and lisitsynite, KBSi2 O6 , from the KhibinaLovozero complex, Kola peninsula,
Russia. Can Mineral 39:159169
Voldan J (1981) Crystallization of Rb2 OB2 O3 4SiO2 . Silikaty 25:165167
Zeolite structures database (www.iza-structure.org/databases/)
Layered double hydroxides (LDH) a wide family of compounds involving representatives of closely related mineral groups, including hydrotalcitemanasseite,
quintinite, woodwardite, meixnerite and hydrocalumite-kuzelite groups, as well as
their numerous synthetic analogues (Strunz and Nickel 2001, Rives 2001, Khan
and OHare 2002). In the past decades, LDH attracted considerable attention due
to their chemical and structural features applicable in different elds of industry.
These compounds are easily synthesized in water solutions under ambient conditions. LDH adopt huge variety of cations inside hydroxide slabs, making possible
easy preparation of oxide catalysts by simple heat treatment. But the most striking
and useful peculiarity is their anion-exchange properties. Contrary to large number
of cation-exchangers related to different classes of compounds, number of known
anion-exchange frameworks is rather limited. Among them, LDH (also known as
anionic clays) are quite unique because they may adopt and exchange tenths of
different anions (Miyata and Kimura 1973, Miyata 1975, Miyata and Okada 1977,
Rives 2001, Khan and OHare 2002, Kloprogge et al. 2002 and the references
cited herein). As a consequence, they are widely used for selective extraction of
anions, purication of solutions and preparation of different types of combined
catalysts.
Structural topology of LDH is governed by presence of positively charged
hydroxide slabs (sheets) [(M2+1x M3+x )(OH)2 ]x+ or [(Li1/3 M3+2/3 )(OH)2 ]1/3+ ,
derivatives of [M2+ (OH)2 ] slabs of brucite structure type. The slabs inherit hexagonal symmetry of corresponding brucite units and like that are composed of
edge-sharing [M(OH)6 ] octahedra parallel to (0001). In brucite, Mg(OH)2 , and
its analogues, hydroxide slabs are charge balanced, and interlayer interactions are
maintained by hydrogen bonds. In LDH, part of divalent cations in slabs is substituted by M3+ or by combination of (Li1/3 M3+2/3 ). As a consequence, the slabs
Sergey N. Britvin
Department of Crystallography, Faculty of Geology, St. Petersburg State University, University
Emb. 7/9, St. Petersburg, Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
123
124
S.N. Britvin
become positively charged. Charge balance is then achieved by intercalation of anions (CO32 , SO4 2 , NO3 , Cl , OH , etc.) in the interlayer. Besides that, water,
polar organic molecules and large solvated cations ([Na(H2 O)6 ]+ , [Ca(H2 O)6 ]2+ )
may intercalate in the interlayer space.
Several different factors are responsible for formation of complex hybrid structures of LDH.
1. Ordering of octahedral cations within the slabs results in superstructures based
on multiplication of simplest in-slab brucite translation (ab ) equal to edge
of [M(OH)6 ] octahedron. Typical examples are structures with M2+ /M3+
=
2/1, minerals related to motukoreaite (a = 3ab ) and quintinite (a = 2ab 3)
series (Rius and Plana 1986, Cooper and Hawthorne 1996, Huminicki and
Hawthorne 2003, Arakcheeva et al. 1996, Chao and Gault 1997). Wermlandite, [Mg7 (Al,Fe)2 (OH)18 ]2+ [(Ca,Mg)(SO4 )2 (H2 O)12 ]2 (M2+ /M3+ = 7/2) also
possess 3ab superstructure (Rius and Allmann 1978, 1984) (Fig. 1). Insertion
of large-radii cations (i.e. Ca2+ ) in hydroxide slabs may lead to further distortion of lattice yielding pseudo-hexagonal superstructures like hydrocalumite,
[Ca4 Al2 (OH)12 ]2+ [Cl2 (H2 O)4 ]2 (Sacerdoti and Passaglia 1988).
2. Anions and solvated cations in the interlayer may be packed in a different ways.
Composition of intercalants and their ordering affects the thickness of interlayer
space and consequently, of packet thickness (= hydroxide slab + interlayer). Typical examples of interlayer packing are shown on Fig. 2.
3. Different stacking sequences of packet units (hydroxide slab + interlayer) along
c-axis result in formation of a variety of polytypes. In addition, brucite-like layers may be double-stacked along hexagonal c-axis resulting in unique structure of coalingite, [Mg10 Fe2 3+ (OH)24 ]2+ [(CO3 )(H2 O)2 ]2 (Pastor-Rodriguez
and Taylor 1971).
4. In case of intercalation of large polar organic molecules (carboxylate- and
hydroxyl-anions), a strong interaction between hydroxide slabs and anions
125
Fig. 2 Typical kinds of interlayer stacking observed in layered double hydroxides. Structural data
are taken from the references cited in the text
It is well known that Sr2+ is much larger than Mg2+ (ionic radii of Sr2+ is 1.18 A
of Mg2+ ) thus its insertion in [Mg(OH)6 ] octahedra of brucite-like
against 0.75 A
126
S.N. Britvin
Fig. 3 White spherulites composed of karchevskyite and quintinite-3T on pink dolomite. Field of
view = 3 mm
slabs is quite unlikely. On the other part, free solvated Sr2+ expected in the interlayer
would adopt eight-fold coordination typical of that observed in aqua solutions of
Sr2+ salts or in Sr(OH)2 8H2 O (Smith 1953, Moreau et al. 2002, Ricci et al. 2005).
In particular, Sr(OH)2 8H2 O possess two-layer structure composed of [Sr(OH)8 ]
square antiprisms and water molecules; the thickness of single [Sr(OH)2 ] layer is
This value is by 2 A
large than thickness of free interlayer space of 3.75 A
cal5.8 A.
culated for karchevskyite. Consequently, Sr2+ can not intercalate into karchevskyite
interlayer as solvated ion. The only way of such intercalation is to form polyhedra
which are linked with adjacent brucite-like slabs. A calculation based on published
data (Desgranges et al. 1996, Ricci et al. 2005) leads to a speculation that [SrO8 ]
polyhedra may be linked with [(Mg,Al)(OH)6 ] octahedra via hydrogen bridges like
SrOHO(Mg, Al). In such a case, karchevskyite might be the rst representative of layered double hydroxide pillared by inorganic ion.
Fig. 4 Possible way of Sr2+ intercalation into karchevskyite interlayer. Polyhedra dimensions and
lengths of hydrogen bonds are adjusted to the ordinal scale
Brucite-like slab
Interlayer
Reference
Space group
a, A
c, A
Z
Basal d, A
a relative to ab
(of brucite)
Quintinite-3T
Hydrotalcite
[Mg18 Al9 (OH)54 ]9+
[Sr2 (CO3 ,PO4 )9 (H2 O,
H3 O)11 ]9
Britvin et al. (2007)
P3*
16.06
25.66
3
8.55
3ab 3
Karchevskyite
Motukoreaite
Wermlandite
128
S.N. Britvin
References
Arakcheeva AV, Pushcharovskii DYu, Rastsvetaeva RK, Atencio D, Lubman GU (1996) Crystal structure and comparative crystal chemistry of Al2 Mg4 (OH)12 (CO3 )3H2 O, a new mineral
from the hydrotalcite- manasseite group. Kristallograya 41:10241034 (in Russian)
Bellotto M, Rebours B, Clause O, Lynch J, Bazin D, Elkaim E (1996) A reexamination of hydrotalcite crystal chemistry. J Phys Chem 100:85278534
Britvin, SN, Chukanov NV, Bekenova GK, Yagovkina MA, Antonov AV, Bogdanova AN, Krasnova NI (2007) Karchevskyite [Mg18 A19 (OH)54 ][Sr2 (CO3 ,PO4 )9 (H2 O,H3 O)11 ], a new mineral related to layered double hydroxides. Proceedings of the Russian Mineralogical Society
36(5):5264 (in Russian)
Chao G, Gault RA (1997) Quintinite-2H, quintinite-3T, charmarite-2H, charmarite-3T and
caresite-3T, a new group of carbonate minerals related to the hydrotalcite-manasseite group.
Can Mineral 35:15411549
Cooper MA, Hawthorne FC (1996) The crystal structure of shigaite, [Mn22+ (OH)6 ]3 (SO4 )2
Na(H2 O)6 {H2 O}6 , a hydrotalcite-group mineral. Can Mineral 34:9197
Desgranges L, Calvarin G, Chevrier G (1996) Interlayer interactions in M(OH)2 : a neutron diffraction study of Mg(OH)2 . Acta Crystallogr B 52:8286
Gago S, Pillinger M, Santos TM, Goncalves IS (2004) ZnAl layered double hydroxide pillared
by different dicarboxylate anions. CeramSilikaty 48(4):155158
Huminicki DMC, Hawthorne FC (2003) The crystal structure of nikischerite, NaFe2+6 Al3 (SO4 )2
(OH)18 (H2 O)12 , a mineral of the shigaite group. Can Mineral 41:7982
Khan AI, OHare D (2002) Intercalation chemistry of layered double hydrohides: recent
developments and applications. J Mater Chem 12:31913198
Kloprogge JT, Wharton D, Hickey L, Frost RL (2002) Infrared and Raman study of interlayer
anions CO32 , NO3 , SO42 and ClO4 in Mg/Al hydrotalcite. Am Mineral 87:623629
Mitchell IV (ed) (1990) Pillared layered structures: current trends and applications. Elsevier
Applied Science, London
Miyata S (1975) The synthesis of hydrotalcite-like compounds and their structures and physicochemical properties I: the systems Mg2+ -Al3+ -NO3 , Mg2+ -Al3+ -Cl , Mg2+ -Al3+ -ClO4 ,
Ni2+ -Al3+ -Cl and Zn2+ -Al3+ -Cl . Clay Clay Miner 23:369375
Miyata S, Kimura T (1973) Synthesis of new hydrotalcite-like compounds and their physicochemical properties. Chem Lett 843848
Miyata S, Okada A (1977) Synthesis of hydrotalcite-like compounds and their physico-chemical
properties the system Mg2+ -Al3+ -SO42 and Mg2+ -Al3+ -CrO42 . Clay Clay Miner
25:1418
Moreau G, Helm L, Purans J, Merbach AE (2002) Structural investigation of the aqueous Eu2+
Ion: comparison with Sr2+ using the XAFS technique. J Phys Chem A 106:30343043
Pastor-Rodriguez J, Taylor HFW (1971) Crystal structure of coalingite. Mineral Mag 38:286294
Ricci JS, Stevens RC, McMullan RK, Klooster WT (2005) Structure of strontium hydroxide
octahydrate, Sr(OH)2 8H2 O, at 20, 100 and 200 K from neutron diffraction. Acta Crystallogr
B 61:381386
Rius J, Allmann R (1978) Structure des wermlandites, [Mg7 (Al,Fe)2 (OH)18 ]2+ [Ca(H2 O)6
(SO4 )]2 . Fortschr Mineral B 56:113114
Rius J, Allmann R (1984) The superstructure of the double layer mineral wermlandite
[Mg7 (Al0.57 ,Fe0.433 )(OH)18 ]2+ [(Ca0.6 ,Mg0.4 )(SO4 )2 (H2 O)12 ]2 . Z Kristallogr B 168:133144
Rius J, Plana F (1986) Contribution to the superstructure resolution of the double layer mineral
motukoreaite. Neues Jb Miner Monat 6:263272
Rives V (ed) (2001) Layered double hydroxides: present and future. Nova Scientic Publishing
Inc, New York
Sacerdoti M, Passaglia E (1988) Hydrocalumite from Latium, Italy: its crystal structure and
relationship with related synthetic phases. Neues Jb Miner Monat 462475
Smith HG (1953) The crystal structure of strontium hydroxide octahydrate, Sr(OH)2 (H2 O)8 . Acta
Crystallogr 6:604609
Strunz H, Nickel EH (2001) Strunz mineralogical tables. Schweizerbartsche Verlagsbuchhandlung, Stuttgart
Introduction
Lead oxy- and hydroxychlorides are common in alteration zones of Pb mineral deposits (Table 1), where they form as a result of hydrolysis of Pb2+ ions in aqueous
chloride media during oxidation of primary sulde minerals (e.g. PbS). Formation
and precipitation of lead oxide and hydroxide chlorides play an important role in
the transport of Pb from mines and mill tailings to the biosphere. These phases are
also well-known as corrosion products of lead artefacts (Edwards et al., 1992) and
as precipitates in natural gas production installations. Pb oxide chlorides were detected in dust particles emitted from a lead smelter. Pb halides (chloride-bromides)
and oxy- and hydroxyhalides were observed in automobile exhaust gases (Post and
Buseck, 1985) and roadside soils (Smith, 1976). Pb oxyhalides have not only environmental importance, but are also interesting from the viewpoint of material
science. Materials with anisotropic crystal structure exhibit a variety of physical
properties that depend strongly on crystallographic direction, such as a refractive
index (i.e., birefringent materials), the permanent dipole moment in ferroelectrics,
the magnetocrystalline anisotropy in ferromagnets, and carrier mobilities in ionic
conductors. Glasses based on lead oxyhalides are widely used in the conversion of
infrared light into visible light. PbOPbBr2 based materials, the dehydroxylation
products of Pb(OH)Br, are used in the preparation of low melting glasses useful as
glass scintillators in high energy physics.
Oleg I. Siidra
Department of Crystallography, St. Petersburg State University, University Emb. 7/9, 199034
St. Petersburg, Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
Sergey V. Krivovichev
Department of Crystallography, St. Petersburg State University, University Emb. 7/9, 199034
St. Petersburg, Russia
129
C2/c
B1
9:14
7:10
2:1:1
2:1:1
Bmmb
Cmcm
C2/c
9:14
I4/mmm
C2/c
I4/mmm
1:1
I4/mmm
1:1
1:1
C2/m
3:8
5:8
Pmc21
Pnma
2:3
P2/m
2:3
2:3
Space group
Chemical formula
and mineral name
O:Pb
5.63
5.60
19.73 / 82.21
12.70
12.68
26.07
3.89
3.92
3.99
13.58
5.81
11.88
10.46
/ ,
a, A
5.58
12.25
8.80 / 78.08
22.58 / 118.37
22.57 / 118.11
5.84 / 102.61
3.89
3.92
3.99
20.10
105.73
6.90
5.81
5.76 / 97.79
/ ,
b, A
12.43
5.45
13.63 / 100.04
11.29
11.28
22.74
22.80
12.85
22.51
7.46
15.14
9.51
6.70
/ ,
c, A
Table 1 Crystallographic data of Pb(II) oxychloride minerals containing OPb4 oxocentered tetrahedra
389.8
373.8
2242.4
2848.4
2847.1
3375.3
345.6
197.4
358.8
1961.0
606.7
655.8
399.4
3
V, A
Gillberg (1961)
Welch (2004)
Pertlik (1987)
Reference
130
O.I. Siidra and S.V. Krivovichev
131
132
which is equal to
opposite to the 6s2 electron pair are in the range 2.202.40 A,
0.600.40 v.u.
The interesting feature of Pb(II) compounds is a possible presence of weak
Pb Pb attractive interactions with energy close to that of a hydrogen bond (Pyyko,
1997). The role of these close shell interactions seems to be very important in stabilization of some structure types. The crystal structure of litharge (tetragonal PbO) is
based upon the [OPb] sheets formed by edge sharing of OPb4 tetrahedra. However,
despite its layered character, the mineral does not have a good cleavage parallel to
the plane of the sheets. On the basis of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) investigations, Gabuda et al. (1999) suggested presence of attractive Pb Pb interactions
that provide interlayer bonding and three-dimensional integrity of the structure.
Due to the low charge of the central O2 anion, OPb4 tetrahedra may link
through edges as well as through corners. Therefore, structural complexity of the
oxocentered tetrahedral units is higher than that of other tetrahedral units known in
chemistry, i.e. of silicate anions. Topological complexity induced by the possibility
of edge and corner sharing tetrahedra results in the fact that the Pb:O ratio in oxocentered complexes might be more than one, which is in stark contrast to silicates,
where the Si:O ratio is in the range of 0.2500.500.
Below we provide description of some practically-signicant chain lead oxyhalides based upon OPb4 tetrahedra in the order of increasing complexity, i.e.
starting from single OPb4 chains, double chains and complex chains with mixed
OPbn A4n tetrahedra in nal.
of 2.732.98 A, which is a distance between the imaginary middle points of the two
opposite edges of a OPb4 tetrahedron. Similar chains have also been found in the
structure of Pb2+x OCl2+2x (Siidra et al., 2007c).
The ionic conductivity of the PbOPbCl2 system was studied in detail in
Matsumoto et al., 2001, where the 3PbCl2 2PbO phase (identied by X-ray powder
diffraction as Pb5 O2 Cl6 ) was found to have the highest conductivity ((24)102
S/cm at 350 C and 1104 S/cm at 25 C). However, the structure of this phase and,
133
Fig. 1 Chains of edge-sharing oxocentered OPb4 tetrahedra in the structure of Pb2+x OCl2+2x (left)
and geometrical parameters of OPb4 tetrahedra (right). Note the deviation of the PbOPb angles
corresponding to the Pb... Pb shared edge from the ideal tetrahedral value of 109.5
consequently, the mechanism of the ionic conductivity remained unknown until recently. The structure contains seven completely occupied Pb positions; each of them
and by several (from
is coordinated by two O2 anions (Pb2+ O2 = 2.262.45 A)
The lead sites with low occupancy
4 to 7) Cl anions (Pb2+ Cl = 2.753.60 A).
are coordinated only by Cl ions. The Pb2+x OCl2+2x structure as a whole can be
represented as consisting of two structurally different two-dimensional (2D) blocks
L and L (Fig. 2). The L block consists of completely ordered [O2 Pb4 ]4+ chains
(Fig. 2) and Cl anions, whereas the L unit contains a system of Pb and Cl positions with low occupancy. The determined crystal structure of Pb2+x OCl2+2x allows
one to understand the mechanism of the high ionic conductivity of this compound
described for the rst time by Matsumoto et al. The presence in the structure of
columns of cation and anion vacancies is indicative of a high mobility of ions located in these channels and shows possible directions of ion transfer in the structure.
Matsumoto et al. identied the chloride ion as the major charge carrier in this system, which is in agreement with the results of the present work.
In as much as the structure can be divided into alternating nonconducting (with
completely occupied positions) and conducting (with low-occupancy sites) 2D layers, Pb2+x OCl2+2x can be considered to be a two-dimensional ionic conductor
(Fig. 3). The thickness of the nonconducting layer is about 1.5 nm, which allows
us to preliminarily describe Pb2+x OCl2+2x as a nanocondenser. At the same time,
additional studies are required to measure conductivity anisotropy in single crystals
of the compound.
Note that lead oxyhalides are also of considerable interest for fabrication of
new nanomaterials. Sigman and Korgel (2005) recently described synthesis and
properties of highly birefringent Pb3 O2 Cl2 nanostructures, with composition of a
natural mineral mendipite. Bulk Pb3 O2 Cl2 (mendipite) shows relatively strong
134
Fig. 2 The crystal structure of Pb2+x OCl2+2x projected along the a axis. Large grey spheres are
Pb2+ cations, small black and white spheres are Cl and O2 anions, respectively. Only the PbO
bonds are shown
Fig. 3 Schematic
representation of the structure
of Pb2+x OCl2+2x as based
upon 2D blocks
135
Formula
a, A
b, A
c, A
R1
0:1
1:9
2:8
3:7
4:6
5:5
6:4
7:3
8:2
9:1
1:0
Pb3 O2 Br2
Pb3 O2 Cl0.19 Br1.81
Pb3 O2 Cl0.46 Br1.54
Pb3 O2 Cl0.52 Br1.48
Pb3 O2 Cl0.81 Br1.19
Pb3 O2 Cl1.03 Br0.97
Pb3 O2 Cl1.09 Br0.91
Pb3 O2 Cl1.41 Br0.59
Pb3 O2 Cl1.61 Br0.39
Pb3 O2 Cl1.84 Br0.16
Pb3 O2 l2
12.244(5)
12.1949(7)
12.100(9)
12.0518(11)
11.9818(19)
11.922(5)
11.917(9)
11.8957(28)
11.9077(17)
11.8928(17)
11.808(8)
5.872(2)
5.8705(5)
5.855(5)
5.8556(5)
5.8485(9)
5.835(2)
5.819(5)
5.8244(14)
5.8264(8)
5.8163(9)
5.7790(41)
9.799(4)
9.7968(9)
9.755(2)
9.7526(9)
9.7273(15)
9.701(4)
9.663(8)
9.6441(23)
9.6117(13)
9.5653(14)
9.4784(68)
0.056
0.065
0.081
0.025
0.047
0.083
0.053
0.038
0.051
0.053
0.040
Cl:Br
obtained
porous Si. Thus, the birefrigent of the Pb3 O2 Cl2 nanobelts is strongly enhanced in
comparison to a bulk material.
Practical importance of mendipite-related phases prompted us to take a closer
look at the crystal chemistry of the series Pb3 O2 Cl2 Pb3 O2 Br2 . Crystal structure
studies of these phases also provide important information pertinent to an understanding of the transport of lead and the crystallization of lead compounds in natural
systems.
Single crystals of mendipite phases were synthesized by the solid-state reactions
method with the step of 10% Cl:Br ratio (Table 2). Elongated yellowish transparent
crystals were used for a single-crystal X-ray diffraction analysis. Chemical composition of all samples was conrmed by a microprobe chemical analysis.
In crystal structures of the mendipite series Pb3 O2 Cl2 Pb3 O2 Br2 , the [O2 Pb3 ]
chains extend along the b axis (Figs. 4, 5) (Siidra et al., 2007b). They have two
mutually perpendicular orientations and are linked through weak PbX (X = Cl, Br)
bonds only.
The double [O2 Pb3 ] chains of OPb4 tetrahedra are shown in Fig. 4. These chains
are quite common in minerals and inorganic compounds (Krivovichev et al., 2004).
The identity periods of the [O2 Pb3 ] chains are in the range from 5.71 to 5.95 A.
Fig. 4 The [O2 Pb3 ] chains in the crystal structures of the mendipite series Pb3 O2 Cl2 Pb3 O2 Br2
136
In closely related structure of damaraite, the [O2 Pb3 ] chains are linked through
OH groups to form a [Pb3 O2 ](OH) sheet. As is common in structures containing
PbO/OH clusters, in damaraite, OH groups form two short (OH)Pb bonds that
result in (OH)Pb2 dimers. In the structures of Pb7 O4 (OH)4 Cl2 (Krivovichev and
Burns, 2002) and Pb7 O4 (OH)4 Br2 (Siidra et al., 2007d) the [O2 Pb3 ] chains extend
along a and are linked by the (OH)Pb2 dimers into a three-dimensional framework.
This PbO/OH framework has channels parallel to a that contain Cl anions.
Determination of lattice parameters by single crystal studies showed strong deviation from Vegards rule, which can be seen on Fig. 6. Note that the cell volume
changes linearly (Fig. 7).
Nonlinearity of lattice parameters drawn on Fig. 6 is caused by the ordering of
halide anions over two crystallographically nonequivalent sites, X1 and X2 (Table 3;
Fig. 8). Br atoms prefer the X2 position (Table 3), whereas Cl prefers the X1 site.
137
3
Fig. 7 Cell volume V , A
versus the Cl:Br ratio for
mendipite-related Pb3 O2 Cl2
Pb3 O2 Br2 compounds
Pb1X2 and Pb2X2 bond lengths are most sensitive to the occupancy of the X
sites, which is in agreement with the non-linear behaviour of the a and c parameters
(Fig. 6). Bond lengths oriented along the b axis are changing only slightly.
Recently we have reported (Siidra et al., 2007a) synthesis and crystal structures
of Pb6 LaO7 X(X = Cl, Br) (Fig. 9) based upon the [O7 Pb6 La]+ chains of mixedmetal OPbn La4n tetrahedra (Fig. 10). The topology of the chains can be described
as being based upon an arrangement of eight tetrahedra that all share the same central La atom.
This complex has the [O8 Pb10 La3 ] composition and represents a fragment of
the uorite (CaF2 ) structure, where each Ca atom is shared between eight FCa4
tetrahedra.
It is important to note that the La-free OPb4 tetrahedra do not participate in the
[O8 Pb10 La3 ] clusters but are attached to them, providing their linkage into an one
Table 3 Occupancy of X1 and X2 positions by halogen atoms in the Pb3 O2 Cl2 Pb3 O2 Br2 system
Cl:Br ratio
X1
X2
0:1
1:9
2:8
3:7
4:6
5:5
6:4
7:3
8:2
9:1
1:0
Cl
Br0.815(18) Cl0.185(18)
Br0.54(4) Cl0.46(4)
Br0.450(9) Cl0.550(9)
Br0.289(14) Cl0.711(14)
Br0.15(3) Cl0.85(3)
Br0.14(2) Cl0.86(2)
Br0.043(12) Cl0.957(12)
Br0.020(16) Cl0.980(16)
Br
Br
Cl
Cl
Cl
Br0.934(9) Cl0.066(9)
Br0.907(13) Cl0.093(13)
Br0.81(3) Cl0.19(3)
Br0.77(2) Cl0.23(2)
Br0.553(13) Cl0.447(13)
Br0.369(16) Cl0.631(16)
Br0.186(19) Cl0.814(19)
Br
138
Fig. 8 X1 () and X2 () occupancy by Cl atoms versus the Cl:Br ratio for the Pb3 O2 Cl2
Pb3 O2 Br2 compounds
Fig. 9 Projections of the crystal structures of Pb6 LaO7 Br (a) and Pb6 LaO7 Cl (b) along the c and
b axes, respectively
139
dimensional chain. This makes the structure of compounds Pb6 LaO7 X (X = Cl, Br)
even more complex. Despite the number of symmetrically independent atoms, the
metal oxide chains in these compounds are topologically and geometrically identical. The halogen ions connect the chains through the weak Pb-X bonds. It is of
interest that incorporation of Cl atoms instead of Br atoms into the structure causes
a lowering of the symmetry from Cmcm to C2/m. For all known lead oxyhalides that
have chlorine and bromine analogues, this effect has never been reported.
As fas as we know, this is the rst example of a Pb oxyhalide with such a dramatic
inuence of halogen atoms on the symmetry of the structure.
Studied mixed lead-lanthanum oxybromides are known as a good luminescent
material (U.S. Patent 4029851) which is stimulable or excitable through the intermediary of X-rays for the emission of photographically effective light. Such luminescent material excitable by X-rays consisting essentially of activated lanthanum-lead
oxybromide crystals wherein the lead content is in the range of 0.0110 mole
percen. This compound include terbium as an activator and this luminescent material have the general formula: (La,Pb)OBr:Tb.
Fluorescent or luminescent materials of this type are utilized in order to convert X-rays into light, the latter of which is transmitted to an observation or
140
photographic system responsive to this light, and which is more sensitive with respect to this light as compared to X-rays themselves. Hereby, sensitive exposure or
photographic systems are such as the photolms or photocathodes of a luminescent
material-photocathode sandwich arrangement, as would be utilized in X-ray image
intensiers and X-ray television camera tubes.
However, encountered in this luminescent material is the disadvantage that, upon
stimulation with X-rays light is emitted primarily in the green spectral range. Usual
X-ray lms, however, have their maximum responsiveness in the blue spectral range.
Insofar as it desired to obtain an optimum conversion, it is necessary to employ a
special lm which is sensitized particularly to this green light. Moreover, the mentioned luminescent or uorescent materials are more or less hygroscopic so as to
lose their luminescent power with time through moisture absorption. This is predicated on that most organic binding agents absorb water from the air during the
course of time, so that the luminescent material changes under the formation of lanthanum hydroxide. Under this inuence of the moisture, the luminescent capacity
thus constantly reduces. In accordance with an earlier proposal there is provided
a luminescent material in which the above-mentioned advantages are avoided and
which is thereby durable also in moist air and optimally converts X-rays into light
within a spectral band (blue light) which has a good effect on commercially available photographic material.
The mentioned above data on some natural and synthetic chain lead oxyhalides
demonstrate that studies of this class of compounds are of fundamental importance
and are promising from the viewpoint of their applications in creation materials with
new and unusual properties.
Acknowledgements This work was nancially supported by the Alexander von Humboldt
Stiftung, RFBR-DFG (06-05-04000), and the Swiss Science Foundation, the Ministry of Science
and Education (Grant RNP 2113077) and the Federal Agency on Education (SPbSU innovation
project Innovation educational environment in the classic University) for nancial and instrumental support.
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Introduction
Titano- and niobo-phyllosilicates such as lomonosovite Na4 Ti4 [(Si2 O7 )2 |O4 ]
2Na3 PO4 , -lomonosovite Na4 Ti4 [(Si2 O7 )2 |(OH, F)4 ]NaPO2 (OH)2 , murmanite
Na4 Ti4 [(Si2 O7 )2 |O4 ]5H2 O, vuonnemite Na5 TiNb2 [(Si2 O7 )2 |(F, O)4 ]2Na3 PO4 ,
and epistolite Na5 TiNb2 [(Si2 O7 )2 |(F, O)4 ]5H2 O are widespread in alkaline
massifs worldwide. All the species are typical medium-late minerals of alkaline
pegmatites, and lomonosovite and murmanite are also rock-forming minerals of
nepheline and sodalite syenites (up to 20 vol. % in poikilitic sodalite-nepheline
syenite of the Lovozero massif).
Crystal structures of lomonosovite and vuonnemite are based upon parallel to
(001) trilaminar packets with their cores consisting of close packed TiO6 and
NaO6 octachedra and marginal sheets consisting of TiO6 (in lomonosovite and
-lomonosovite) or NbO6 (in-vuonnemite) octachedra and corner-sharing Si2 O7
dimers reinforced with Na(O, OH)8 polyhedra (Fig. 1). Between the packets, there
are two-laminar layers of 2Na3 PO4 . So far, there are six sodium positions in the
structures under considerations (Belov et al., 1977; Ercit et al., 1998).
There is a widespread opinion that lomonosovite and vuonnemite easily alter in
Nature, loose Na3 PO4 , absorb water and transform into murmanite and epistolite,
Ekaterina A. Selivanova
Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Apatity, Russia
Viktor N. Yakovenchuk
Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Apatity, Russia
Yakov A. Pakhomovsky
Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Apatity, Russia
Gregory Yu. Ivanyuk
Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Apatity, Russia,
e-mail: [email protected]
143
144
Fig. 1 Crystal strucrures of lomonosovite after Belov et al. (1977) and vuonnemite after Ercit
et al. (1998)
Experimental
To simulate the low-temperature hydrothermal alteration of lomonosovite, vuonnemite and murmanite at the background of the media alkalinity decreasing, small
lamellae of these minerals were loaded in 1M solution of CaCl2 and NH4 Cl at 80 C
145
during 100 h. The lamellae were obtained by crushing of large homogeneous crystals (Table 1) from the polymineral Palitra vein in foyaite of Mt. Kedykvyrpakhk
(lomonosovite and vuonnemite) and from an ussingite-nepheline-microcline vein
in nepheline syenite of Mt. Alluaiv (murmanite). After the treating, murmanite
had no any visible changes, bright-yellow vuonnemite becames colourless with a
pearl lustre, and brown lomonosovite showed an interchange of brown and white
layers.
The powder X-ray-diffraction patterns of treated lomonosovite, vuonnemite and
murmanite were obtained by means of the URS1 instrument operated at 40 kV
and 30 mA with a 114.7 mm DebyeScherrer camera and FeK radiation (Fig. 2).
Lomonosovite transforms into -lomonosovite but nor in murmanite during the
treating. At the powder X-ray diffraction pattern of treated vuonnemite, reections
became more diffuse and really look like those belonging to epistolite. However,
all the reections do not change their position and, so far, the pattern quite dif of original
fers from epistolite one (compare positions of (002) reection at 7A
in epistolite). Treated murmanite gives diffuse
and treated vuonnemite and at 5.9 A
powder X-ray diffraction patterns up to continuous spectrum of amorphous substance with some perovskite reections. The examination of these lamellae using
Leo-1450 scanning electron microscope with Rontec EDS-analyzer shows a weak
linear gradient of composition from rim to core (Fig. 3). No layers with different
composition have been observed. The chemical composition of original and treated
phases has been studied by wave-length dispersion spectrometry using Cameca MS46 electron microprobe (Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre of the Russian
Academy of Sciences, Apatity) operating at 20 kV and 2030 nA. Analyses were
performed by electron probe defocused up to 30 microns and by continuous movement of the sample in order to minimize mineral damage and water loss during
10-second counting time. The following standards were used: lorenzenite (Na, Ti),
pyrope (Mg, Al), diopside (Si, Ca), wadeite (K), synthetic MnCO3 (Mn), hematite
(Fe), celestine (Sr), synthetic ZrSiO4 (Zr), metallic niobium (Nb), uorapatite (P),
synthetic CeS (Ce) and atacamite (Cl).
Water content was calculated as 100 wt. % minus SUM of oxides of analyzed
elements.
It is established that lomonosovite and vuonnemite loose more than a 2/3 of Na,
insignicant part of which has been exchanged by Ca, whereas all phosphorus remains in the structure (see Table 1). Murmanite transforms into ne-powder mix of
opal and Ti-oxides with insignicant changes in total chemical composition. So
far, the intermediate product of lomonosovite alteration is -lomonosovite (core
of treated lamellae: point 1 at Fig. 3) and nal product is Na-decient phase of
the same structure with H2 O or H3 O+ in mica-like packets and H3 PO4 molecules
between them (rims of treated lamellae: point 3 at Fig. 3):
30.24
23.16
13.78
2.47
21.86
1.63
2.37
4.96
100.50
0.00
Na2 O
MgO
Al2 O3
SiO2
P2 O5
Cl
K2 O
CaO
TiO2
MnO
FeO
SrO
ZrO2
Nb2 O5
SUM
H2 O = 100 SUM
Original
Core
3
Treated
99.08
0.92
27.31
0.44
24.08
13.83
2.29
23.6
1.31
1.89
4.34
Lomonosovite
Component
87.68
12.32
25.68
14.85
3.02
26.04
1.29
2.21
4.74
9.3
0.48
Rim
4
94.71
5.29
28.31
22.44
12.90
0.59
23.51
1.38
1.40
4.18
Boiled
94.39
5.61
28.91
0.08
22.41
12.67
0.57
9.82
0.96
0.14
18.83
Original
Vuonnemite
7.99
83.96
16.04
0.15
26.58
14.69
0.09
0.1
9.88
0.72
0.23
21.38
Core
7
Treated
2.03
80.06
19.94
0.21
24.81
14.3
0.26
0.09
10.81
0.72
0.36
23.93
Rim
8
95.10
4.90
29.68
0.09
22.28
12.53
0.50
9.39
1.08
0.20
19.35
Boiled
83.76
16.24
9.20
0.54
28.76
0.17
0.43
3.41
26.07
3.88
1.33
0.49
2.87
6.61
10
Original
Murmanite
85.72
14.28
7.80
0.55
31.53
0.19
0.58
3.84
25.08
2.93
1.42
0.80
3.49
7.51
11
Treated
Table 1 Chemical composition (wt.%) and unit formula (apfu, Si+Al=4) of lomonosovite, vuonnemite and murmanite lamellae treated with solution of CaCl2
and NH4 Cl at 80 C during 48 h and boiled in distilled water during 24 h
146
E.A. Selivanova et al.
10.13
0.46
0.24
2.84
0.39
0.34
4.00
2.02
Na
K
Ca
Sr
Mn
Mg
Ti
Nb
Zr
Fe3+
Si
Al
P
H
Cl
Original
Lomonosovite
Component
Table 1 (Continued)
8.80
0.41
0.18
0.11
2.95
0.33
0.26
4.00
1.95
1.01
Core
3
Treated
2.81
0.50
0.17
0.11
3.05
0.33
0.29
4.00
1.96
12.87
Rim
4
9.78
0.11
0.21
3.15
0.34
0.21
4.00
1.95
6.28
Boiled
9.96
0.11
0.15
1.31
1.51
0.02
3.98
0.02
1.91
6.65
Original
Vuonnemite
Treated
1.11
1.45
0.09
0.03
3.97
0.03
1.86
18.14
0.02
2.32
0.02
Core
7
0.10
1.30
1.73
0.05
3.96
0.04
1.93
23.94
0.07
0.63
0.02
Rim
8
10.28
0.10
0.16
1.26
1.56
0.03
3.98
0.02
1.90
5.87
Boiled
2.48
0.08
0.51
0.04
0.46
0.10
2.73
0.42
0.20
0.16
4.00
0.02
15.08
10
Original
Murmanite
1.92
0.09
0.52
0.06
0.32
0.10
2.39
0.43
0.22
0.15
4.00
0.02
12.08
11
Treated
148
Fig. 2 Powder X-ray diffraction patterns of lomonosovite, vuonnemite and products of their alteration in 1M solution of CaCl2 and NH4 Cl at 80 C during 100 h
Fig. 3 BSE image of lomonosovite and vuonnemite lamellae treated in solution of CaCl2 and
NH4 Cl and content of Na, P and H in the numbered points
149
Original lomonosovite:
(Na10.13 Ca0.46 Mn0.24 )=10.83 (Ti2.84 Nb0.39 Fe3+ 0.34 )=3.57 [Si4 O17.90 ](PO4 )2.02
Point 1 :
(Na8.80 Ca0.41 Mn0.18 Mg0.11 )=9.50 (Ti2.95 Nb0.33 Fe3+ 0.26 )=3.54 [Si4 O16.56 (OH)1.44 ](PO4 )1.95
Point 3 :
(Na2.81 Ca0.50 Mn0.17 Mg0.11 )=3.59 (Ti3.05 Nb0.33 Fe3+ 0.29 )=3.67 [Si4 O14.23 (OH)3.77 ](PO4 )1.96 4.55H2 O
Decationization of vuonnemite produces similar Nb-phases (points 4
and 6 at Fig. 3):
Original vuonnemite:
(Na9.96 Mn0.15 Ca0.11 )=10.22 (Nb1.51 Ti1.31 Fe3+ 0.02 )=2.84 [(Si3.98 Al0.02 )=4 O15.56 (OH)2.44 ]
(PO4 )1.91 2.11H2 O
Point 4 :
(Na2.32 Mn0.09 K0.02 )=2.43 (Nb1.45 Ti1.11 Fe3+ 0.03 )=2.59 [(Si3.97 Al0.03 )=4 O6.69 (OH)11.31 ]
(PO4 )1.86 3.22H2 O
Point 6 : (Na0.63 Mn0.10 K0.02 )=0.75 (Nb1.73 Ti1.30 Fe3+ 0.05 )=3.08 [(Si3.96 Al0.04 )
=4 O7.02 (OH)10.98 ](PO4 )1.93 6.48H2 O.
It is evident that there is another mechanism of vuonnemite alteration by Na removing (probably from octahedral sheets of 3-layer mica-like packets), but there
are no PO4 removing. It seems it is process that forms optically inhomogeneous
lomonosovitebeta-lomonosovite intergrowth in Nature. May the process to be different principally with the tradition way of the phyllosilicate alteration?
To answer the question, we repeat the experiment of A.P. Khomyakov (2004)
with alteration of lomonosovite and vuonnemite in boiling water. Lamellae of both
the minerals from the same original crystals were boiled in distilled water during
24 h. After the boiling, lamellae of both minerals remain without noticeable changes
in colour and composition (see Table 1):
Original lomonosovite:
(Na10.13 Ca0.46 Mn0.24 )=10.83 (Ti2.84 Nb0.39 Fe3+0.34 )=3.57 [Si4 O17.90 ](PO4 )2.02
Boiled lomonosovite:
(Na9.78 Mn0.21 Ca0.11 )=10.10 (Ti3.15 Nb0.34 Fe3+0.21 )=3.70
[Si4 O17.50 (OH)0.50 ](PO4 )1.95 2.89H2 O.
and
150
Boiled vuonnemite:
(Na10.28 Mn0.16 Ca0.10 )=10.54 (Nb1.56 Ti1.26 Fe3+ 0.03 )=2.85
[(Si3.98 Al0.02 )=4 O16.01 (OH)1.99 ](PO4 )1.90 1.94H2 O.
Boiled material has powder X-ray diffraction patterns identical with ones of original crystals. So far, traditional schema of lomonosovite and vuonnemite transition into murmanite and epistolite by means of Na3 PO4 removing and hydration
is doubtful, that is in agreement with our observations of mineral associations.
Discussion
Lomonosovite and vuonnemite heating in solution of CaCl2 and NH4 Cl produce
similar sodium-decient phases without a cardinal reorganization of the mineral
structures. Sodium is leached from vuonnemite more easily than from lomonosovite. It is in accordance with natural evidences that lomonosovite is more stable
than vuonnemite during hydrothermal alteration. Such lomonosovite stability is obviously caused by titanium presence instead of niobium within marginal sheets of
the trilaminar packets.
It seems obvious that atoms of Na within the core of trilaminar packets are mostly
stable than ones in others positions, especially between the packets (Khomyakov,
1976). Consequently, -lomonosovite can be considered as a result of H3 O+
Na+ substitution within Na3 PO4 layers. In vuonnemite, however, such schema of
Na substitution can not explain conservation of c parameter of the mineral structure,
even if 6 sodium atoms will be exchanged into 6 water molecules. We assume that
in our experiments there is removing of Na cations from core of trilaminar packets
that swell, so far, ab intra.
Alteration of murmanite produces slowly-acid microporous ion-exchangers with
TiOH-groups. Really, partial pseudomorphs of labuntsovite and zorite group minerals after murmanite are frequently observed in Nature (Yakovenchuk et al., 2005;
Menshikov et al., 2006). Contrariwise, lomonosovite and vuonnemite are usually
very fresh, and no pseudomorphs after them have been xed. Impossibility of phosphorus redistribution from lomonosovite can be a reason of uorapatite rarity within
lomonosovite-bearing foidolites of the Lovozero massif, whereas adjacent Khibiny
massif includes the world largest apatite deposits but nor lomonosovite-bearing
ijolite-urtite.
Acknowledgements We thank Swiss National Foundation (SNF) for nancial support in the
framework of the SCOPES program. Also we are grateful to A.V. Bazai and Yu. P. Menshikov
for help in the investigations and Prof. S. V. Krivovichev who edited our manuscript.
151
References
Azarova YuV, Pekov IV, Chukanov NV, Zadov AE (2002) Products and processes of vuonnemite
alteration under low-temperature transformation of hyperagpaitic pegmatites. Zapiski VMO
(Proceedings of the Russian Mineralogical Society) 131:5:112121 (in Russian)
Belov NV, Gavrilova GS, Soloveva LP, Khalilov AD (1977) Rened structure of lomonosovite.
Sov Phys Dokl 22:422424 (in Russian)
Borneman-Starynkevich ID (1946) On chemical nature of murmanite. Problems of mineralogy,
geochemistry and petrography, AN SSSR Press, MoscowLeningrad, pp 6674 (in Russian)
Ercit TS, Cooper MA, Hawthorne FC (1998) The crystal structure of vuonnemite,
Na11 Ti4+ Nb2 (Si2 O7 )2 (PO4 )2 O3 (F,OH), a phosphate-bearing sorosilicate of the lomonosovite
group. Can Mineral 36:13111320
Khomyakov AP (1976) Constitution and typochemical features of lomonosovite group minerals.
Constitution and properties of minerals. Naukova Dumka Kiev 10:96104 (in Russian)
Khomyakov AP (1995) Mineralogy of hyperagpaitic alkaline rocks. Clarendon Press, Oxford,
p 223
Khomyakov AP (2004) Zeolite-like amphoterosilicates of hyperagpaitic rocks and their unique
properties. Rev Mineral Geochem Accad Lincei Roma 231234
Kostyleva-Labuntsova EE, Borutsky BE, Sokolova MN, Shlyukova ZV, Dorfman MD, Dudkin
OB, Kozyreva LV, Ikorsky SV (1978) Mineralogiya Khibinskogo massiva (Mineralogy of the
Khibiny massif). Minerals Nauka Moscow 2:585 (in Russian)
Menshikov YuP, Krivovichev SV, Pakhomovsky YaA, Yakovenchuk VN, Ivanyuk GYu,
Mikhailova JA, Armbruster T, Selivanova EA (2006) Chivruaiite, Ca4 (Ti,Nb)5 [(Si6 O17 )2
(OH,O)5 ]13-14H2 O, a new mineral from hydrothermal veins of Khibiny and Lovozero alkaline massifs. Am Mineral 91:922928
Pekov IV (2000) Lovozero massif: history, pegmatites, minerals. Ocean Pictures Ltd, Moscow,
Russia, p 480
Pekov IV, Podlesny AS (2004) Kukisvumchorr deposit: mineralogy of alkaline pegmatites and
hydrothermalites. Mineral Almanac 7:168
Sokolova MN, Zabavnikova NI, Rudnitskaya ES, Organova NI (1971) On composition and homogeneity of lomonosovite group minerals from the Khibiny massif. Problems of homogeneity
and non-homogeneity of minerals (in Russian). Nauka Moscow 174187
Yakovenchuk VN, Ivanyuk GYu, Pakhomovsky YaA, Menshikov YuP (ed F.Wall) (2005) Khibiny.
Laplandia Minerals, Apatity, p 467
Unique tubular ribbons silicate radicals with composition [Si8 O20 ] have been
found in the crystal structure of manaksite. Group of minerals with tubular silicate
radicals is not large. Miserite (Scott 1976), canasite (Rozdestvenskaya et al. 1988),
frankamenite (Rozdestvenskaya et al. 1996), narsarsukite (Peacor and Buerger
1962), and manaksite are minerals that contain different types of silicate tubes.
Among them, manaksite is the only structure containing tubes with a hexagonal
cross-section.
A rare mineral manaksite, ideally NaKMnSi4 O10 , was discovered in 1992 in
Lovozero alkali massif, Kola Peninsula, Russia (Khomyakov et al. 1992). Manaksite
is a Mn analog of fenaksite, NaKFeSi4 O10 , which was found only in Khibiny alkaline massif, Russia (Dorfman et al. 1959; Sokolova et al. 1993). Recently, intermediate compositions between these minerals were described and an isomorphous series
fenaksite-manaksite was established (Ageeva 2000). Crystal structure of fenaksite
was studied twice (Golovachev et al. 1970, Prencipe et al. 1998). In current study,
a CCD-based detector mounted on an automated single-crystal diffractometer has
been used to collect X-ray diffraction data, resulting in successful elucidation of the
structure. Crystals with different Fe content were chosen from the mineralogical collection of Dr. Maya Sokolova and Dr. Olga Ageeva (IGEM RAS, Moscow, Russia).
Crystals were mounted on a Bruker three-circle diffractometer equipped with
a SMART APEX CCD detector, using monochromated MoK X-radiation. The
unit cell dimensions were rened using least-squares techniques (Table 1). The
three-dimensional data were reduced and corrected for Lorentz, polarization, and
background effects using the Bruker program SAINT. An empirical absorption
correction was done for crystal by modeling it as an ellipsoid.
Oxana Karimova
Department of Mineralogy, Institute of Geology of Ore Deposits Russian Academy of Science, 35
Staromonetny, Moscow 119017, Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
Peter C. Burns
Department of Civil Engineering and Geological Sciences, University of Notre Dame, 156
Fitzpatrick Hall, Notre Dame, IN 46556-0767, USA
153
154
a (A)
b (A)
c (A)
( )
( )
( )
3)
V (A
Space group
Z
Total Ref.
Unique Ref.
Unique |F0 | 4F
R1
wR2
S
6.9774(5)
8.1778(6)
9.9664(8)
105.782(2)
99.743(2)
114.440(1)
471.74(6)
P-1
2
9520
3798
2622
0.029
0.055
0.835
6.9752(6)
8.1505(7)
9.9464(8)
105.803(2)
99.990(2)
114.332(2)
468.71(4)
P-1
2
9514
3793
3673
0.034
0.084
1.023
The Bruker SHELXTL Version 5 system of programs was used for the determination and renement of crystal structure. Structure was solved by direct methods
and rened to R = 0.029 (1) and 0.034 (2) (Table 1).
After collecting the X-ray-diffraction data, the crystal 1 was polished and analyzed with an electron microprobe. As expected K, Na, Si, Fe and Mn were major elements. Quantitative analysis gave the following: SiO2 63.6, Na2 O 7.76, MgO 0.41,
K2 O 12.4, CaO 0.3, FeO 6.17, MnO 10.3, total 100.94 wt.%. The empirical formula
is (Na0.94 K1 Ca0.02 )(Fe0.32 Mn0.55 Mg0.04 )Si4 O10 , assuming Si = 4 and O = 10.
The crystal structure of manaksite contains four symmetrically independent Si (1) and
tetrahedra. Inter-atomic SiO distances lie in the range 1.5691.635 A
and 2.79 A
(2). K atom is coordinated by nine oxygen atoms, the KO bonds are spread over
(1) and 2.723.37 A
(2).
an interval of 2.743.36 A
Si-tetrahedra are joined together via common vertices forming tubes with hexagonal cross-sections (Fig. 1).
The tubes are extended parallel to the a axis. Walls of the silicate tubes are formed
by 4-membered rings of silicate tetrahedra. Therefore, manaksite silicate radicals
can be considered as lace constructions. Two MnO5 trigonal bipyramids are connected together via a common edge. Two adjacent NaO5 tetragonal pyramids share
a common edge as well. The dimers of Mn- and Na-polyhedra are linked together via
155
common edges, to form columns parallel to the a axis. The Mn- and Na-polyhedral
columns link silicate chains via common vertices into a three-dimensional network
(Fig. 2). It is very interesting that Na plays in the structure an anionic role and Napolyhedra participate in the formation of a mixed framework. K-centered polyhedra
are situated inside the silicate tubes.
Mixed framework of in the structure manaksite, formed by SiO4 -tetrahedra, Mn
and Na-polyhedra, has hollow channels with dimensions of 23 A.
156
Acknowledgements Authors are grateful to Dr. Maya Sokolova and Dr. Olga Ageeva for providing
crystals used in this study and Dr. Ian Steele for quantitative chemical analysis of the manaksite
crystal.
References
Ageeva OA (2000) New fenaksite-manaksite isomorphous series. Dokl Akad Nauk Earth Sci A
373:927929
Dorfman MD, Rogachev DL, Goroshchenko ZI, Morketsova AV (1959) Fenaksite a new mineral.
Tr Mineral Muz Akad Nauk SSSR 9:152157 (in Russian)
Golovachev VP, Drozdov YuN, Kuzmin EA, Belov NV (1970) The crystal structure of fenaksite,
NaKFeSi4 O10 . Dokl Akad Nauk SSSR 194:818820
Khomyakov AP, Kurova TA, Nechelyustov GN (1992) Manaksite, NaKMnSi4 O10 a new mineral.
Zapiski VMO 121:112115 (in Russian)
Peacor DR, Buerger MJ (1962) The determination and renement of the structure of narsarsukite,
Na2 TiOSi4 O10 . Am Mineral 47:539556
Prencipe M, Gorchakova EA, Ferraris G, Khomyakov AP (1998) Manaksite (NaKMnSi4 O10 ) and
fenaksite (NaKFeSi4 O10 ): two silicate from the hyperagpaitic rocks of Lovozero and Khibina
(Kola Peninsula, Russia) with a peculiar [Si4 O10 ]4 channel-like anion. Eighteenth Eur. Cryst.
Meeting. Praha. Materials Structure in Chemistry Biology Physics Technology. Bull Czech
Slovak Cryst Ass 5B:ECM-18 posters-abstracts:229230
Rozdestvenskaya IV, Nikishova LV, Bannova II, Labeznik KA (1988) Canasite: renement and
characteristics of the structure, structural typomorphism. Mineral Zh 10:3144 (in Russian)
Rozdestvenskaya IV, Nikishova LV, Labeznik KA (1996) The crystal structure of frankamenite.
Mineral Mag 60:897905
Scott JD (1976) Crystal strusture of miserite a Zoltal type 5-structure. Can Mineral 14:515528
Sokolova MN, Suchkova EM, Vlasova EV, Golovanova TI, Kartashov PM, Kovalenko VS (1993)
New data on nature and synthetic fenaksite. Dokl Akad Nauk 329:212215
Introduction
Layer silicates (phyllosilicates) are a well known source of nanolayers for technological applications (Auerbach et al. 2004). In particular, low-charge tetrahedraloctahedral-tetrahedral (TOT) layers of clay minerals, e.g. smectites, are used to
prepare organoclay complexes, nanocomposites and pillared materials. This contribution aims to attract the attention on the possibility of using TOT-like layers of
heterophyllosilicates (Ferraris et al. 1996) to prepare organoclay-like hybrids and
pillared structures. The presence of ve and six co-ordinated titanium in the layers
of the heterophyllosilicates looks particularly appealing owing to the well known
catalytic properties of this chemical element.
According to the IUPAC nomenclature (Schoonheydt et al. 1999) pillaring is
the process by which a layered compound is transformed into a thermally stable
micro- and/or mesoporous material with retention of the layer structure. A pillared
derivative is distinguished from an ordinary intercalate by virtue of intracrystalline
porosity made possible by the lateral separation of the intercalated guest. A pillared
material differs from an ordered porous material by having disordered channels. In
fact, whereas the layers of pillared materials are periodically stacked, let say along
[001], and their diffraction patterns show sharp 00l maxima, the interlayer content
is not stacked coherently.
The process of pillaring layered materials includes the following steps: (i)
swelling in a polar solvent (usually water); (ii) substitution of the original interlayer
cations by bulky (inorganic/organic) cations (pillaring agent); (iii) washing (further
chemical reactions occur at this step); (iv) calcination (pillars are formed) (Fig. 1).
Giovanni Ferraris
Dipartimento di Scienze Mineralogiche e Petrologiche, Universit`a di Torino Istituto di
Geoscienze e Georisorse, CNR Via Valperga Caluso 35, I-10125 Torino, Italy, e-mail:
[email protected]
157
158
G. Ferraris
Fig. 1 Schematic representation of the process of pillaring. From left to right side: a phyllosilicate
is swelled in water (large blank circles); the original interlayer cations (small grey circles) are
replaced by a pillaring agent (short ellipses) that, after further chemical treatment, forms pillars
(elongated ellipses)
Pillared materials show the following basic characteristics: e.g., in pillared clays
in the starting material, to at
the interlayer spacing increases from about 5 A,
the layers do not collapse under calcination; the pillaring agent (inorleast 15 A;
ganic/organic) is laterally spaced; the interlayer space is porous (i.e., at least N2
molecules can go through); not necessarily, pores and pillars are ordered.
The replacement of the natural interlayer inorganic cations in TOT layer silicates by organic cations, through ion exchange, is known since long time. Organic
molecules can also be incorporated via the formation of organic complexes with the
natural interlayer cations; some of these complexes are stable only in the interlayer
ambient. These properties have been exploited to identify expandable clay minerals and, more recently to prepare advanced materials: (i) organoclays which are
able either to selectively adsorb neutral or ionic species (e.g., inorganic and organic
pollutants) or to act as catalysts; (ii) nanocomposite materials where the organic
interlayer consists of a polymeric compound.
Heterophyllosilicates
The polysomatic series of heterophyllosilicates consists of layered minerals where a
row of Ti polyhedra (or replacing cations) periodically substitutes a row of disilicate
tetrahedra in the T tetrahedral sheet of a TOT layer; the octahedral O sheet is instead
maintained (Fig. 2). HOH layers are thus obtained where H stands for hetero to
indicate the presence of rows of 5- or 6-coordinated Ti in the T sheet. The series has
general formula I2+nY4+3n [Ti2 (O )2+p Si4+4n O14+10n ](O )2+2n .
Depending on the periodicity of the Ti substitution and ignoring some minor
topological features, three types of HOH layers (Fig. 2) are known: bafertisite- (n =
0), astrophyllite- (n = 1) and nafertisite-type (n = 2) layer. In the general formula the
value of p (0, 1, 2) depends on the conguration around Ti; I and Y are interlayer
and O-sheet cations, respectively.
The so called bafertisite-type layer (cf. Sokolova 2006) is the most versatile of
the three known heterophyllosilicate layers, being able to sandwich complex interlayer contents (Table 1). The variety of crystal structures containing this layer is
159
Fig. 2 From left to right and top to bottom: by substitution of rows of Si-tetrahedra (light grey)
in a TOT phyllosilicate layer by Tioctahedra (dark grey), bafertisite-like, astrophyllite-like, and
nafertisite-like HOH heterophyllosilicate layers are obtained. Octahedra of the O sheet are intermediate grey
by far larger than that known for structures containing the TOT phyllosilicate layer.
However, whereas the latter appears in important rock-forming minerals, like micas
and clay minerals, the titanosilicates we are dealing with occur only in rare hyperalkaline rocks (Khomyakov 1995; Pekov 2000; Yakovenchuk et al. 2005).
The swelling capacity of the layer silicates, normally via sorption of H2 O
molecules, depends mainly on the negative charge of the TOT layer. If the charge is
zero (talc, pyrophyllite) or higher than about 0.6 (vermiculites, micas), swelling is
not possible or can be obtained only by special procedures; smectites (e.g., montmorillonite, saponite), which bear a low (0.250.60) charge, typically swell.
There are consistent evidences of solid-state transformation from one to another member of Table 1 via leaching/substitution of the interlayer composition.
In some cases, swelling processes become evident by comparing the structures of
the parent and daughter phases. As summarized by Khomyakov (1995) an active
interaction with water is a characteristic of many highly alkaline titanosilicates like
the heterophyllosilicates of Table 1. Several stage-by-stage replacements of anhydrous titanosilicates by their hydrated and decationated analogues are described in
the literature. In particular, the two reactions (lomonosovite + H2 O murmanite + Na3 PO4 ) and [vuonnemite + H2 O epistolite + Na3 PO4 ; for this transformation see also Azarova et al. (2002)] represent typical transformations observed
in nature from primary (lomonosovite and vuonnemite) to secondary (murmanite
and epistolite) mineral phases via leaching of interlayer content and hydration that
lead to swelling. Modular (Ferraris et al. 2004) structure models (N`emeth 2004) of
bykovaite and M73 [labelling according to Khomyakov (1995)] support the derivation of these phases from bornemanite-like primary phases. The secondary phases
that are formed via these transformations seem to be suitable candidates to investigate swelling properties in view of using HOH layers to prepare organicinorganic
hybrids and pillared materials.
160
G. Ferraris
Table 1 Members of the bafertisite series for which information on the crystal structure is known;
they are listed in increasing order of the t (either c or a) cell parameter across the layers
Name
Chemical formula
t1
Ref2
Murmanite
(Na,)2 {(Na,Ti)4
[Ti2 (O,H2 O)4 Si4 O14 ]
(OH,F)2 }2H2 O
11.70
Bafertisite
Ba2 {(Fe,Mn)4
[Ti2 O2 (O,OH)2 Si4 O14 ](O,OH)2 }
11.73
Hejtmanite
Ba2 {(Mn,Fe)4
[Ti2 (O,OH)4 Si4 O14 ](OH,F)2 }
11.77
Rastsvetaeva
et al. (1991)
Epistolite
12.14
Sokolova and
Hawthorne (2005)
and N`emeth
et al. (2005)
Vuonnemite
14.45
Lomonosovite
14.50
Yoshimuraite
14.75
McDonald
et al. (2000)
Innelite
14.76
Phosphoinnelite
14.76
Bussenite
16.25
Seidozerite
Na2 {(Na,Mn,Ti)4
[(Zr,Ti)2 O2 Si4 O14 ] F2 }
18.20
Pushcharovsky
et al. (2002)
Lamprophyllite
19.22
Krivovichev
et al. (2003)
Nabalamprophyllite
19.74
Rastsvetaeva and
Chukanov (1999)
Barytolamprophyllite
19.83
Orthoericssonite
Ba2 {Mn4
[Fe2 O2 Si4 O14 ](OH)2 }
20.23
Matsubara (1980)
Quadruphite
Na13 Ca{(Ti,Na,Mg)4
[Ti2 O2 Si4 O14 ]O2 }(PO4 )4 F2
20.36
Sokolova and
Hawthorne (2001)
Surkhobite
(Ca,Na,Ba,K)2 {(Fe,Mn)4
[Ti2 O2 Si4 O14 ](F,O,OH)3 }
20.79
Rozenberg
et al. (2003)
Perraultite
(Na,Ca)(Ba,K){(Mn,Fe)4
[(Ti,Nb)2 O3 Si4 O14 ] (OH,F)2 }
20.84
161
Table 1 (continued)
Name
Chemical formula
t1
Ref2
Delindeite
Ba2 {(Na,Ti,)4
[Ti2 (O,OH)4 Si4 O14 ](H2 O,OH)2 }
21.51
Polyphite
26.45
Sokolova (2005)
Sobolevite
Na12 CaMg{(Ti,Na,Mg)4
[Ti2 O2 Si4 O14 ] O2 }(PO4 )4 F2
40.62
Sokolova (2005)
Bornemanite
BaNa3 {(Na,Ti,Mn)4
[(Ti,Nb)2 O2 Si4 O14 ]
(F,OH)2 }PO4
47.95
M73
(Ba,Na)2 {(Na,Ti,Mn)4
[(Ti,Nb)2 (OH)3 Si4 O14 ]
(OH,O,F)2 }3 H2 O
48.02
N`emeth (2004)
Bykovaite
BaNa{(Na,Ti)4
[(Ti,Nb)2 (OH,O)3 Si4 O14 ]
(OH,F)2 }3H2 O
50.94
N`emeth (2004)
1 The
unit cells given by the quoted authors have been converted to reduced unit cells, if the case.
to the most recent chapter on the structure.
2 Reference
162
G. Ferraris
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Carbon plays an all-important role in nature. Carbon atoms can to form complicated
organic networks some of those are base for existence of known forms of life. Elemental carbon also shows very complicated behavior forming a number of different
structures. Recent years have been marked by an accented interest of scientists in
fullerenes, nanotubes and many nano-sized shapes (Kroto et al., 1985; Iijima, 1991).
Non-crystalline fullerene-like carbon forms were additionally obtained using an
arc discharge, ame, laser pyrolysis (Chhowalla et al., 1997; Mordkovich, 2000;
Grieco et al., 2000), and were even found in petrol soot (Lee et al., 2002). The
term fullerene-like has been used for roughly spherical carbon structures such as
carbon onions and hollow nanoparticles consisting of concentric curled carbon
layers. Some authors have specied additional characteristics such as a diameter
between ca. 5 and 20 nm (Chhowalla et al., 1997) and a lattice spacing of approximately 0.35 nm (Grieco et al., 2000). They infer the curling of graphene layers results from the presence of pentagonal rings as in fullerenes (Grieco et al., 2000).
Other authors assume that four- and eight-membered carbon rings can occur in
fullerene structures (Slanina et al., 1999). In addition, it has been hypothesized that
the graphene layers contain defects in the form of pentagonal, heptagonal, or other
kind of rings, singly or in combination, that affect the graphene-layer curvature and
create different fullerene-like structures (Cataldo, 2002).
Fullerenes and fullerites have been found in the natural environment (Buseck
et al., 1992; Becker et al., 1994; Novgorodova, 1999). Even more intriguingly, the
symmetry and shapes of icosahedral viruses, Murine leukemia virus, for instance,
are directly related to symmetries of giant fullerenes (Nermut and Mulloy, 2007).
Much natural free carbon occurs in the amorphous state in varieties that have long
been of interest because of their intriguing range in structures, properties, and industrial applications. An interesting type of non-crystalline carbon occurs in the shungite rocks of Karelia (Russia) (Shungites of Karelia, 1975; Buseck et al., 1997), from
Vladimir V. Kovalevski
Institute of Geology, Karelian Research Center, Russian Academy of Sciences, Pushkinskaya
St. 11, Petrozavodsk 185610, Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
165
166
V.V. Kovalevski
which the rst natural occurrence of fullerenes was reported (Buseck et al., 1992)
and hollow nanospheres and bers were described (Kovalevski et al., 1996). Shungite rocks have simple mineral composition, which may contain shungite, quartz,
mica, carbonates and traces of other minerals. Shungite has chemical composition
consisting of C with traces of N, O, H and S. All types of these rocks have very
variable physico-chemical properties depending on the shungite structure, C content, the composition and characteristics of minerals and distribution of carbon and
minerals in these shungite rocks. For example, type I rocks have a relatively low
specic gravity (1.82.0 g/cm3 ), high electric conductivity (about 100 S/cm), and
some types have unusually high specic surface areas (up to 500 m2 /g) as measured
by the (BET) adsorption of gaseous nitrogen. Carbon from shungite rocks demonstrates fullerene-like signs on different structural and physical levels.
All high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM) images of the
samples contain well-dened fringes, and these occur in packets of 514 sheets.
Many of these sheets are curved, and in places they appear as if they might close
upon themselves, although the tangle of intervening sheets makes such an interpretation uncertain. The centers of the curved sheets may represent pores, consistent
with the high surface areas inferred from BET measurements. The STEM images
of shungites suggest 3-dimensional shells or, more commonly, fractions of such
shells or regions of graphene structure, that are highly disordered in bent stacks.
The 3-dimensional structures that might be surmised from the HRTEM images are
conrmed by the sets of nanodiffraction patterns. The strengths and directions of the
00l lines of spots correspond to sets of 0.34 nm fringes in the images. The ellipticity
of the rings suggests tilts of the sheets, which are apparently bent into 3-dimensional
shapes approximating closed or partly closed shells of rather irregular cross section.
In that sense it may be described on the permolecular level as a fullerene-like carbon
(Kovalevski et al., 2001).
There are two types of imperfections on the molecular level connected with irregularities of 100 fringes that suggest a disorder of the graphene layers from HRTEM
images. The former are connected with essential disorder of fringes that can resulted from the presence of impurity atoms or clusters in the stack of graphene
layers. Other imperfections connected with insignicant disorder in the direction
of fringes and the distance between them, and can result from point defects or the
four-, ve-, eight-membered or other carbon rings that are signs of fullerene-like
structures (Cataldo, 2002).
The electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) of shungites provides information
on the electronic structure that is very sensitive to the valency, coordination, and
site symmetry of carbon atoms and is right dealing with structure-property relationships. In the low-energy-loss region, two characteristic plasmon peaks occur: one
is the -plasmon corresponding to transitions between the and states located
at approximately 6eV, and the other is -plasmon located at 24.526.5 eV depending on the structure of different shungite carbons. The plasmon peak of those is
shifted to a lower energy with respect to the peak of graphite and is similar to the
peak of fullerene-like carbon spheres (Kovalevski and Moshnikov, 2001).
167
References
Becker L, Bada JL, Winans RE, Hunt JE, Bunch TE, French BM (1994) Fullerenes in the 1.85billion-year-old Sudbury impact structure. Science 265:642644
Buseck PR, Tsipursky SJ, Hettich R (1992) Fullerenes from the geological environment. Science
257:215217
Buseck PR, Galdobina LP, Kovalevski VV, Rozhkova NN, Valley JW, Zaidenberg AZ (1997) Shungites: the carbon-rich rocks of Karelia. Can Mineral 35(6):13631378
Cataldo F (2002) The impact of a fullerene-like concept in carbon black science. Carbon
40(2):157162
Chhowalla M, Aharonov RA, Kiely CJ, Alexandrov I, Amaratunga (1997) Generation and deposition of fullerene- and nanotube-rich carbon thin lms. Phil Mag Lett 75(5):329335
Grieco WJ, Howard JB, Rainey LC, Vander Sande JB (2000) Fullerenic carbon in combustiongenerated soot. Carbon 38(4):597614
Iijima S (1991) Helical microtubules of graphitic carbon. Nature 354(6349):5658
Kovalevski VV, Safronov AN, Markovski JuA (1996) Hollow carbon microspheres and bres produced by catalytic pyrolysis and observed in shungite rocks. Mol Mater 8:2124
Kovalevski VV, Buseck PR, Cowley JM (2001) Comparison of carbon in shungite rocks to other
natural carbons: An X-ray and TEM study. Carbon 39(2):243256
Kovalevski VV, Moshnikov IA (2001) Electron Energy-Loss Spectra of Carbon from Shungite
Rocks Abstr. of 5th Intern. Workshop in Russia. Fullerenes and Atomic Clusters (IWFAC01)
July 26 St Petersb, p 92
Kovalevski VV, Prikhodko AV, Buseck PR (2005) Diamagnetism of natural fullerene-like carbon.
Carbon 43(2):401405
168
V.V. Kovalevski
Kroto HW, Heath JR, OBrien SC, Curl RF, Smalley RE (1985) C60 buckminsterfullerene. Nature
318(6042):162163
Lee TN, Yao N, Chen TJ, Hsu WK (2002) Fullerene-like carbon particles in petrol soot. Carbon
40(12):22752279
Mordkovich VZ (2000) The observation of large concentric shell fullerenes and fullerene-like
nanoparticles in laser pyrolysis carbon blacks. Chem Mater 12:28132818
Nermut MV, Mulloy B (2007) Consideration of the three-dimensional structure of core shells (capsids) in spherical retroviruses. Micron 38(5):462470
Novgorodova MI (1999) What are fullerenes and fullerites in mineral world. Geochem
9:10001008 (in Russsian)
Slanina Z, Zhao X, Osawa E (1999) Relative stabilities of isomeric fullerenes. Adv Strain Interesting Org Mol 7:185235
Sokolov VA, Kalinin YuK (eds) (1975) Shungites of Karelia and ways of their all-purpose utilization. Karelia, Petrozavodsk (in Russian)
Introduction
There is no doubt that the laboratory synthesis (Curl & Smalley, 1988) and subsequent ndings of stable C60 clusters in rocks (Zeidenberg et al., 1996) are the
most impressive events in carbon crystallography and mineralogy for the last 20
years. The fullerenes of less than 60 atoms are known to be unstable and registered
in physical experiments in a minor amount, with those of 2036 atoms forming a
restricted zone (Helden et al., 1993). But just these types of fullerene-like crystalline pores were identied in many clathrate compounds over the last 50 years
(Ripmeester & Ratcliffe, 1998). Hence, our idea is to systematically generate the
series of fullerenes up to the well known C60 shape.
Characterization of Fullerenes
We dene fullerenes as simple (three edges meet at each vertex) polyhedra, with
only pentagonal and hexagonal facets allowed. Let f5 and f6 be the numbers of
pentagonal and hexagonal facets and f , e and v be the numbers of facets, edges and
vertices of any fullerene. Then
f5 + f6 = f , 5 f5 + 6 f6 = 2e and f 5 = 6 f 2e.
At the same time, f e + v = 2, 2e = 3v and 6 f 2e = 12.
Hence, f5 = 12 , f = 12 + f 6 with f6 0.
It follows from the above that v = 2 f 4 20 and
f6 = f 12 = v/2 10.
Yurii L. Voytekhovsky
Geological Institute, Kola Scientic Centre, Russian Academy of Sciences, Apatity, Russia, e-mail:
[email protected]
169
170
Y.L. Voytekhovsky
Thus, any fullerene may be characterized by the vertex Cv and facet 512 6v/210
notations. We use the latter in the generating algorithm. Most of the above equations
are due to Euler. They are provided here for the readers convenience.
Generating Algorithm
We construct a fullerene in the Shlegel projection in the following way. A general
idea is to take the rst facet and surround it by other facets numbered clockwise.
Then, the same procedure should be repeated with the facets numbered as 2, 3 etc.
As the fullerenes are simple polyhedra, only three facets meet at each vertex. The
last facet should be the basal one of the Shlegel projection.
In the simplest case of fullerene 512 , we begin with a pentagonal facet and
build the only possible projection (Fig. 1, No. 1). For fullerene 512 61 , we begin
with the hexagonal facet and try to build the projection. This procedure does not
lead to a fullerene. For fullerenes 512 6n with n > 1, we also begin with a hexagonal facet. But, in this case, to check all the variants, we previously enumerate the
(6, ...) sequences with any permutations of n1 sixes in n+11 dotted positions.
Then we generate the facets in the above procedure in accord with them. For example, the (6, 5, ..., 5, 6) sequence leads to the only fullerene 512 62 (No. 2). The
generating procedure is stopped in three cases: (a) a fullerene is built in accord with
a given sequence, (b) a fullerene is not built if the given facets are already exhausted,
(c) at some step, the next facet would not be pentagonal or hexagonal.
The duplicated fullerenes of the same combinatorial type for a given 512 6n formula should be eliminated. To do this, we use their adjacency matrices for arbitrary
initial numbering of the vertices. Two fullerenes belong to the same combinatorial
type if and only if their adjacency matrices are reducible to each other by the symmetrical permutations of rows and columns. Afterwards, we calculate the automorphism group order of a given fullerene as the number of different vertex reindexings
that save its adjacency matrix.
The series of C20 C60 fullerenes was found to consist of 5770 representatives.
They are characterized by the automorphism group orders and point groups in
Table 1. As in a general case (Voytekhovsky, 2001), they mostly belong to 1, 2
and m classes. For given , the variety of Cv fullerenes slightly drops as an automorphism group order increases. Simultaneously, their physical stability is known
to increase (Curl & Smalley, 1988, Helden et al., 1993). The fullerenes of 6120
automorphism group orders are in Fig. 1.
C20 : 1 (35m), C24 : 2 (12m2), C26 : 3 (6m2), C28 : 4 (43m), C30 : 5
(10m2), C32 : 6 (32), 7 (3m), 8 (6m2), C34 : 9 (3m), C36 : 10, 11 (42m), 12
(6m2), 13 (6/mmm), C38 : 14 (32), 15 (3m), 16 (6m2), C40 : 17 (3m), 18 (mmm),
19, 20 (5m), 21 (43m), C42 : 22 (32), C44 : 23, 24 (32), 25 (23), 2628 (3m),
29, 30 (6m2), C48 : 31 (32), 32, 33 (mmm), 34, 35 (12m2), C50 : 36, 37 (32), 38
(3m), 39 (6m2), 40, 41 (10m2), C52 : 42, 43 (3m), 44, 45 (mmm), 4650 (42m),
51 (23), C54 : 52 (32), 53 (6m2), C56 : 5459 (32), 60 (mmm), 61 (42m), 62, 63
171
Fig. 1 C20 C60 fullerenes of 6120 automorphism group orders in the Shlegel projections. See
text for the point groups
(3m), 64 (43m), C58 : 65, 66 (3m), C60 : 6769 (32), 70 (3m), 71 (mmm), 7275
(42m), 76 (52), 77 (5m), 78, 79 (6/mmm), 80 (35m).
Except for the famous No. 80 shape, Nos. 34, 35, 40, 41, 64 and 7779 appear
to be the most probable fullerenes in physical experiments. They are far from the
restricted zone and can be realized as the shapes of rather high symmetry. Except
for Nos. 1, 2, 5, 19, 20, 34, 35, 40, 41, 76, 77 and 80, most of the C20 C60 fullerenes
172
Y.L. Voytekhovsky
6
8
10
12
20
24
120
a.g.o.
1
2
3
4
6
8
10
12
20
a.g.o.
24
120
s.p.g.
20
1
1
2
m
3
4
222
2/m
mm2
32
3m
mmm
42m
52
23
3m
6m2
5m
10m2
6/mmm
43m
12m2
35m 1
1
s.p.g.
1
1
2
m
3
4
222
2/m
mm2
32
3m
mmm
42m
52
23
3m
6m2
5m
10m2
s.p.g.
6/mmm
43m
12m2
35m
24
26
28
30
32
34
36
2
38
7
40
8
42
23
44
42
3
2
4
2
14
7
1
11
6
22
7
1
1
1
1
6
3
2
1
1
4
1
3
2
1
1
1
1
1
3
2
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
46
69
48
117
50
195
52
307
54
470
22
19
2
52
16
37
25
2
78
26
3
62
38
5
1
3
1
6
2
1
9
1
3
8
1
2
2
5
15
56
700
1
135
49
3
10
2
13
6
17
40
45
58
1037
60
1508
98
58
4
189
67
6
2
1
1
2
19
4
9
3
1
1
4
1
1
2
1
1
1
46
48
2
50
52
54
56
58
60
2
1
2
116
199
271
437
580
924
1205
1
1812
89
4485
1
734
322
15
3
56
8
66
18
9
7
12
1
2
6
8
3
3
3
3
3
2
5770
173
74
76
78
1
2
1
80
1
2
1
82
3
3
84
1
5
5
4
4
86
6
6
3
1
2
1
88
11
7
11
90
16
16
6
2
3
92
38
26
8
1
4
2
5
94
89
26
13
3
2
1
1
2
1
1
5
3
100
336
62
31
3
9
5
1
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
8
3
3
1
1
1
98
169
49
30
3
1
1
2
1
1
96
108
43
14
1
7
24
19
35
46
86
134
187
259
450
774
243
124
11
29
38
14
4
2
4
1
1
2
4
3
2
1
2
3
2
1
1265
174
Y.L. Voytekhovsky
C60 -35m
C80 -10m2
C70 -10m2
C72 -12m2
C80 -5m
C84 -43m
C96 -12m2 a
C96 -12m2 6
C76 -43m
C84 6/mmm
C96 6/mmm
C80 -35m
C90 -10m2
C100 -5m
Fig. 2 The C60 C100 fullerenes with high automorphism group order not less than 20 and no
adjacent pentagons. They appear to be stable in physical experiments and natural conditions
s.p.g.
60
70
72
76
80
80
80
84
84
90
96
96
96
100
35m 21.3
10m2
32.9
12m2
35.0
43m
41.8
35m 48.1
10m2
48.0
5m
47.1
43m
53.7
6/mmm
54.1
10m2
63.3
12m2 a 76.1
12m2 b 74.9
6/mmm
75.3
5m
81.4
R, A
1.80
1.65
1.31
1.88
2.24
2.09
1.75
1.83
1.93
1.59
2.39
1.72
1.75
1.72
175
V, 3
34
C70
32
C68
30
C66
28
26
C64
24
C62
22
0
V,
100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000 1100 12001300
90
C100
C98
C96
80
C92
70
C88
C94
C90
60
C86
C84
C82
C80
50
40
30
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
Fig. 3 The volume of fullerenes C60 C70 (above) and C72 C100 (below). Horizontal axes the
order numbers of fullerenes in the catalogues (Voytekhovsky & Stepenshchikov, 2002, 2003). They
increase with the numbers of atoms in the fullerenes
s.p.g.
35m
10m2
12m2
43m
35m
10m2
5m
43m
6/mmm
10m2
12m2 a
12m2 b
6/mmm
5m
60
70
72
76
80
80
80
84
84
90
96
96
96
100
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
2
3
3
3
1.30
Ra , A
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
2
3
3
3
1.31
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
2
3
3
3
1.32
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
2
3
3
3
1.33
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
2
3
3
3
1.34
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
2
3
3
3
1.35
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
2
3
3
3
1.36
1
1
0
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
2
3
3
3
1.37
1
1
0
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
2
3
3
3
1.38
1
1
0
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
2
3
3
3
1.39
1
1
0
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
2
3
3
3
1.40
Table 4 The maximum number of inner atoms in the potentially stable C60 C100 fullerenes
1
1
0
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
1
3
3
3
1.41
1
1
0
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
1
3
3
3
1.42
1
1
0
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
1
3
3
3
1.43
1
1
0
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
1
2
3
3
1.44
1
1
0
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
1
2
3
2
1.45
1
1
0
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
1
2
3
2
1.46
1
1
0
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
1
2
3
2
1.47
1
1
0
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
1
2
3
2
1.48
1
1
0
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
1
1
2
2
1.49
1
1
0
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
1
1
2
2
1.50
176
Y.L. Voytekhovsky
177
Fig. 4 The fullerenes: 1 C80 (35m), 2 C80 (5m), 3 C96 (12m2, a), 4 C96 (-12m2, b), 5
for the cases 1, 2, 5 and 6,
C96 (6/mmm), 6 C100 (-5m) with inner atoms of Au (Ra = 1.44 A)
for the cases 3 4
and Pt (Ra = 1.38 A)
Conclusions
The true carbone fullerenes and fullerene-like structures were found in the nature:
shungites of the North Karelia (Russia), fulgurites of the Colorado (USA), carbonbearing rocks of the Pechenga (Russia). As for the carbon-bearing geological formations, the geochemical anomalies of noble, rare and disseminated elements are
known there with no distinguished mineral phases. The above calculations give us
the arguments to consider the fullerenes and fullerene-like structures as their possible collectors.
Acknowledgements I thank Ph.D. Dmitry G. Stepenshchikov for his highly skilled assistance.
References
Curl RF, Smalley RE (1988) Probing C60 . Sci 242:10171022
Helden G, Hsu M-T, Gotts N, Bowers MT (1993) Carbon cluster cations with up to 84 atoms:
structures, formation mechanism, and reactivity. J Phys Chem 97:81828192
Ripmeester JA, Ratcliffe CI (1998) The diverse nature of dodecahedral cages in clathrate hydrates as revealed by 129 Xe and 13 C NMR spectroscopy: CO2 as a small-cage guest. Energ
Fuel 12:197202
Voytekhovsky YL (2001) On the symmetry of 4- to 11-hedra. Acta Crystallographica A57:
112113
178
Y.L. Voytekhovsky
Introduction
One of the most important and exciting directions in modern science and technology
is the effort to achieve systematic control of matter at the nanoscale (1 nm = 109
This is now seen as a milestone toward a new industrial revolution as
m = 10 A).
nanomanufacturing will allow signicantly smaller consumption of energy, water,
and resources than is associated with current industries. Nanotechnology involves
creation of devices at the nanoscale based upon such materials as nanocrystals and
clusters (quantum dots), nanowires, nanotubes, thin lms, nanocomposites, and superlattices. The role of the nanoscale in mineralogy and geochemistry has recently
received considerable attention because of its importance for a number of processes ranging from biomineralization to the formation of atmospheric nanoparticles
(Baneld and Navrotsky 2002; Hochella 2002a,b). In this review, we will focus on
naturally occurring nanotubes, i.e. hollow tubular structures with diameters in the
range from about 1 to 1000 nm.
The current interest in nanotubes results from the discovery of carbon nanotubular structures by Iijima in 1991. Considerable research effort has subsequently been
directed toward the creation of inorganic nanotubes of various chemical composition and structure. Thus, in 1992, Tenne et al. succeeded in synthesis of nanotubes and fullerene-like particles of metal disuldes MS2 (M = Mo, W), although
MoS2 tubules had been studied earlier by Chianelli et al. (1979) for catalysis applications. To date, nanotubes have been fabricated for many chemical families,
including transition metal chalcogenides (e.g., MoS2 , CdS), transition metal oxides, transition metal halides, mixed-phase systems (e.g. Mo1x Wx S2 ), boron- and
silicon-based systems, pure metals, and so forth. The synthesis, structure, morphology, and properties of inorganic nanotubes have been the subject of several
Sergey V. Krivovichev
Department of Crystallography, Faculty of Geology, St. Petersburg State University, University
Emb. 7/9, St. Petersburg, Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
179
180
S.V. Krivovichev
comprehensive reviews in the recent chemistry literature (Tenne et al. 1998; Tremel
1999; Rakov 1999; Ivanovskii 2002; Patzke et al. 2002; Tenne 2002, 2003; Rao and
Nath 2003; Remskar 2004; Rao and Tenne 2004). However, it has been rarely recognized that nanotubes were known to mineralogists and geoscientists for more than
40 years prior to the discovery of carbon nanotubes. The present review is intended
to ll this gap and to provide an overview of nanotubes and tubular-shaped materials
in mineral (sulde-based, oxide-based and mixed suldeoxide-based) systems. For
comparison, we shall also consider data on nanotubes prepared in mineral-related
systems, which can be considered as model systems for nanotubes in nature.
Cylindrite
Cylindrite is a complex sulphosalt mineral with chemical composition (Pb,Sn2+)8 Sb4
Fe2 Sn4+
5 S27 . The mineral was rst discovered by Frenzel (1893) from the Santa
Cruz mine, Poopo, Bolivia, and was named for the cylindrical morphology of
its crystals (Fig. 1, left). Microstructures of cylindrite were investigated in detail by Makovicky (1971, 1974) and Wang and Buseck (1992). According to
Makovicky (1971, 1974) and Wang and Kuo (1991), the structure of cylindrite consists of two sulde modules, one pseudohexagonal (H) and one pseudotetragonal
(T), with chemical formulas MS2 and MS, respectively. The T module has composition (Pb,Sb,Sn2+ )S and represents two layers of the galena (PbS) structure.
The H module is an octahedral brucite-like sheet (Sn4+ ,Fe)S2 similar to that observed in berndtite ( SnS2 ). The H and T modules are stacked along the [100] axis
in the sequence . . . HTHT. . . (Fig. 1, right). The T module has a pseudotetragonal
T = 90.0, T = 92.38,
A-centered subcell with aT = 11.73, bT = 5.79, cT = 5.81 A,
T = 93.87 .
a
Note that the b and c parameters are just slightly smaller than the 5.93 A
parameter of the face-centered cubic unit cell of galena, due to the SbPb and
Sn2+ Pb substitutions. The H module has a pseudohexagonal subcell which, in orthogonal A-centered description has dimensions: aH = 11.71, bH = 3.67, cH = 6.32
T = 90.0, T = 92.58, T = 90.85 (Makovicky 1974). The bH parameter of
A,
181
Fig. 1 Left: SEM photo of a tubular cylindrite aggregate. The diameter of the cylinder is about
0.5 mm. Reproduced with permission from Makovicky (1971). Right: Projection of the structure
of cylindrite along the b axis. In the H sheets, cation and anion positions are indicated by small
and large circles, respectively; in the T sheets, circles indicate cation positions. Reproduced with
permission from Makovicky (1974)
The
cylindrite is slightly larger than the b parameter of berndtite, 3.623.65 A.
mismatch is obvious between the b and c parameters of the two modules with the
The mist between the T and H modules permits curlb = 2.12 and c = 0.51 A.
ing of the HT double layer into a cylinder parallel to the c axis with the b axis as
its tangent (the mismatch is more dramatic along the [010] direction). Wang and
Kuo (1991) and Wang and Buseck (1992) examined interactions between the H and
T sheets and described the structure of cylindrite as incommensurately modulated
with a modulation vector q depending upon the curvature of the cylindrite crystals
(see also Williams and Hyde 1988). It was observed that, with increasing radius of
the sheet and decreasing Gaussian curvature, the crystal develops planar segments,
whereas, near the core of the cylinder, the sheets may display kinking. The nature
of the cylindrical morphology may vary from crystal to crystal depending upon the
chemical composition. To our knowledge, there are no reports in the literature on
the synthesis of cylindrite.
Oxide-Based Nanotubes
Chrysotile
Chrysotile, Mg3 Si2 O5 (OH)4 , is probably the most investigated natural nanotube material known so far. Its occurrence and structure have been reviewed by Wicks and
182
S.V. Krivovichev
OHanley (1988). The rst note concerning the tubular structure of chrysotile was
by Pauling (1930) who suggested that the Mg-analogue of kaolinite should have
a curved structure because of the mist between the octahedral and the tetrahedral sheets. Later investigations by Noll and Kircher (1951), Bates et al. (1950a),
Yada (1967, 1971), etc. conrmed this hypothesis, and the tubular structure of
chrysotile bers was demonstrated by electron diffraction and transmission electron
microscopy (TEM). The structure itself was solved by Whittaker (1953, 1956a,b,c)
and subsequently rened on the basis of synthetic material by Falini et al. (2002,
2004). It is based upon double layers consisting of mica-like [Si2 O5 ] sheets of
corner-sharing SiO4 tetrahedra and brucite-like (MgO2 (OH)4 ) trioctahedral sheets
(Fig. 2, left). There is a mist between the tetrahedral and octahedral sheets (usually
described in terms of difference in the atetr and aoct parameters specied in Fig. 2,
left). This mist results in a strain that can be relieved by curling of the double layer
with the tetrahedral part on the inner surface and the octahedral part on the outer
surface. As calculated by Whittaker (1955), the mist is completely compensated
at the ideal radius-of-curvature of 8.8 nm. There are several varieties of chrysotile;
they differ mainly in the stacking of the double sheets and in the direction around
which the sheets are rolled. Clinochrysotile and orthochrysotile are rolled around
[100] but correspond to 2M and 2O polytypes, respectively. Parachrysotile is rolled
around the b axis. There are also helical varieties of chrysotile with a helicity angle
of up to 10 (e.g. Yada 1971).
Fig. 2 Left: The structure of chrysotile (b) is based upon double layers consisting of mica-like
[Si2 O5 ] sheets of corner-sharing SiO4 tetrahedra (a) and brucite-like (MgO2 (OH)4 ) trioctahedral sheets (c). Scheme (d) shows directions of curling of the octahedral sheet. Right: Cross sections of chrysotile nanotubes with spiral (a, b) and concentric structures (cf). Reproduced from
Yada (1971)
183
Halloysite
Halloysite, Al2 Si2 O5 (OH)4 (H2 O)2 , is an analogue of kaolinite, Al2 Si2 O5 (OH)4 ,
for which tubular morphology was demonstrated by Bates et al. (1950b). The
structure of halloysite is closely related to that of chrysotile, and is based upon
1:1 aluminosilicate layers consisting of a dioctahedral sheet of (AlO2 (OH)4 ) octahedra and a mica-like silicate [Si2 O5 ] sheet of corner-sharing SiO4 tetrahedra
(Mitra and Bhattacherjee 1975; Giese 1988). The tubular morphology of halloysite
was explained by Bates et al. (1950b) in terms of mist between the tetrahedral and octahedral sheets, analogous to that present in chrysotile. In contrast
to chrysotile, the stacking order and orientation of the sheets are more random
(Mitra and Bhattacherjee 1975). In its hydrated state, halloysite consists of tubes
with internal diameter of 18 nm, thin walls of 56 nm thickness, and lengths of
up to 20 m. High surface area, pore dimensions and relatively low price make
Fig. 3 HRTEM image of hollow multiwall serpentine nanotube from the Mighei CM chondrite.
Reproduced with permission from Zega et al. (2004)
184
S.V. Krivovichev
Imogolite
Imogolite, Al2 SiO3 (OH)4 , was rst described in soils derived from glassy volcanic
ash in Japan (Yoshinaga and Aomine 1962) and later was identied as an important
constituent of the B horizon of Podzol soils (see Gustafsson et al. 1999 and references therein). The status of imogolite as a separate paracrystalline mineral species
was under discussion and was nally established in 1987 (Bayliss (1987). Synthesis
of imogolite was reported by Farmer et al. (1977) and Wada (1987) from solutions
containing hydroxyaluminium cations and orthosilicic acid. Wada and Wada (1982)
prepared Ge-for-Si-substituted imogolite.
The structure of the mineral was reported by Cradwick et al. (1972) on the basis
of electron-diffraction studies as containing aluminosilicate tubes with external diameter 2.1 nm. The tube walls consist of a dioctahedral gibbsite-like Al(OH)3 sheet
with SiO3 (OH) tetrahedra attached to the sheet around an empty octahedral site
(Fig. 4). The OO distance in an ideal SiO4 tetrahedron is smaller than the OO
distance in an AlO6 octahedron which allows the curling of the gibbsite sheet in
order to accommodate SiO3 (OH) tetrahedra attached to its inner surface (Fig. 4).
The structural connectivity and Q0 character of the Si tetrahedra was conrmed by
nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy (Goodman et al. 1985).
In the structure of gibbsite, the Al(OH)3 sheets have lateral dimensions ag bg =
2 . In imogolite, the sheets are rolled around ag as the tube axis such
8.6 5.1 A
Fig. 4 Model of the aluminosilicate sheet that constitute imogolite nanotube (ag , bg gibbsite unit cell parameters; ci c parameter of imogolite) (a); cross-section of imogolite nanotube
(b; reproduced with permission from Pohl et al. (1996))
185
that the imogolite nanotubes are periodic with a c axis repeat distance of 8.4 A
(Wada 1987). Cradwick et al. (1972) suggested that a model with 10 gibbsite unit
cells around the circumference is the most likely structure for imogolite nanotubes.
On the basis of computer simulation studies and comparison of their results with N2
and CH4 adsorption isotherms, Pohl et al. (1996) concluded that 10-unit and 12-unit
structures are more likely for natural and synthetic imogolite, respectively. Farmer
and Fraser (1979), on the other hand, concluded that the natural material has a 12unit structure, whereas synthetic material has a 14-unit structure. Replacement of
SiO3 (OH) tetrahedra by larger GeO3 (OH) tetrahedra results in a 18-unit tube structure (Wada and Wada 1982). Note that, in any case, the tube found in imogolite
has an achiral structure. In condensed material, imogolite nanotubes form closepacked arrangements with center-to-center separations between 2.27 and 2.62 nm.
The energy of imogolite tubes versus their diameter was investigated by Tamura
and Kawamura (2002) using molecular-dynamics simulations. These authors found
that the total energy of imogolite has a minimum around a diameter of 2.62.9 nm,
which corresponds to the 14- to 16-unit structure. The internal diameter of imogolite nanotubes varies from 0.6 to 1.0 nm depending upon composition (Ackerman
et al. 1993; Bursill et al. 2000). Imamura et al. (1993) concluded that natural imogolite has a pore diameter of about 0.65 nm (more consistent with the 10-unit structure
model of Cradwick et al. (1972)) since their samples refused adsorption of 1,3,5triisopropylbenzene (diameter of 0.85 nm).
In general, imogolite has received considerable attention for its excellent adsorption properties that result from its large surface area. Thus, imogolite plays an important role in controlling water quality in forest soils by adsorbing anions such as
3
AsO3
4 and PO4 (Gustafsson et al. 1998; Gustafsson 2001). Imogolite may also
be a possible sorbent for other contaminants and nutrients. Johnson et al. (1988)
were able to intercalate imogolite as a regular monolayer in the interlayer space of
smectite clays. These intercalates, known as tubular silicate-layered silicate (TSLS)
nanocomposites, may have important applications in selective absorption and catalysis (Werpy et al. 1989; Johnson and Pinnavaia (1991). Imogolite has also been
suggested for use as a shape-selective catalyst (Imamura et al. 1993). Imogolite
nanotubes are very rigid, which makes an acidic dispersion of imogolite an ideal
lyotropic liquid-crystal system (Kajiwara et al. 1986a,b; Donkai et al. 1993). It is
of interest that imogolite liquid-crystal systems contain a variety of mesostructures
formed by self-assembly of imogolite nanotubes (Kajiwara et al. 1986a; Gabriel and
Davidson 2003).
186
S.V. Krivovichev
Fig. 5 SEM image of a natural tochilinite cylinder from Cornwall (a; reproduced with permission from Zolensky and Mackinnon 1986); HRTEM image of a synthetic tochilinite nanotube (b;
reproduced with permission from Kakos et al. (1994))
187
Formation Mechanisms
Perhaps the most important mechanism of formation of nanotubes in minerals is
by mist rolling. This mechanism functions when a structure contains at least two
chemically and structurally different blocks (i.e. when the mineral has a composite structure). Mismatch in the unit-cell parameters between the two blocks results in a strain that can be relieved by curling of the specic structural layers.
The structural blocks can be both two-dimensional (as in the case of cylindrite,
tochilinite, serpentine-group minerals and halloysite) or, two- and zero-dimensional
188
S.V. Krivovichev
(imogolite). It is the structural mismatch between the blocks, rather than their dimensionality, which plays an essential role in nanotube formation.
However, there are many cases when rolling layers into tubes cannot be explained
on the basis of a mist mechanism. The classical example is that of carbon nanotubes, for which there is no obvious composite structure. Another example is natural and synthetic molybdenite nano- and microtubes. Seifert et al. (2002) considered
the stability of MS2 nanotubes (M = Mo, W) in terms of the interplay between the
strain energy in the tubes due to the bending of the layers and the energy due to
unsaturated (dangling) bonds in layer tapes. These authors demonstrated that, for
a small number of atoms, at structures are more favorable than tubular. However,
with increasing width of the tape, tubular structure become more stable. Thus, for
molybdenite, the A(36,36) armchair nanotube with a diameter of 6.2 nm is energetically more favorable than a corresponding tape. The presence of unsaturated
bonds on the edges of tapes is therefore a major factor driving nanotube formation.
As demonstrated by Seifert et al. (2002), MWNTs have an additional stabilization
force that comes from the van der Waals interactions between the adjacent layers.
In general, this additional stabilization may explain the prevalence of MWNTs over
SWNTs.
Acknowledgements I thank Russian Federation Ministry of Science and Education for nancial
support through the RNP grant (2.1.1.3077) and Molecular geochemistry and biogeochemistry
project of the program Innovative education environment in a classical University.
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191
Introduction
The reprocessing of irradiated fuel of nuclear power plants results in the formation of a great amount of radioactive wastes, including high-level radioactive wastes
(HLW). Selection of suitable immobilizing materials is a key part of safe HLW
management in the nuclear fuel cycle. The search for connement matrices began
in the 1950s with study of various glassy and crystalline materials containing silicates, phosphates, and titanates (Ewing and Lutze 1988). Only borosilicate and
alumophosphate glasses are used for this purpose on an industrial scale (Hench
et al. 1984; Vashman et al. 1997). These glasses are not capable of incorporating
sufcient amounts of actinides (particularly, Pu) and have low resistance to chemical corrosion by water (Matzke and van Geel 1996; Laverov et al. 1997). Interaction
of the vitreous matrices with underground waters will result in the formation of colloidal particles (Glass as a waste form. . . 1996), which can carry actinides for very
long distances. The glasses also easily crystallize on aging (Vashman et al. 1997),
which signicantly decreases stability of the waste forms due to appearance of
various soluble phases, such as alkali and alkaline-earth silicates, phosphates, and
molybdates.
For efcient management of the high level radioactive wastes, they should be
separated into fractions (Actinide. . . 1999). One of them contains tens of weight
percents of actinides, zirconium, and lanthanides. U, Np, Pu, and Am dominate
among the actinides, among the lanthanides light REEs (Nd, Ce, La, and Pr) are
the most signicant. One more group of actinide wastes is produced during conversion of weapons plutonium into nuclear fuel. Actinide-rich waste forms alternative to glasses are the crystalline matrices (Ringwood 1985; Vance et al. 1995).
Tatiana Livshits
Institute of Geology of Ore Deposits, Moscow, Russia
Sergey Yudintsev
Institute of Geology of Ore Deposits, Moscow, Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
193
194
Various host phases have been proposed, differing in their capability for actinide
incorporation, as well as in resistance to water attack and radiation damages (Ewing
and Lutze 1988; Hench et al. 1984; Laverov et al. 1997; Ringwood 1985; Vance
et al. 1995; Fielding and White 1987; Ebbinghaus et al. 1998; Wang et al. 1999;
Begg et al. 1998). The pyrochlore (Ca, Gd, U, Pu, Hf)2 T2 O7 was developed in the
USA for immobilization of excess Pu (Ebbinghaus et al. 1998). Zircon, zirconolite,
perovskite, YAl garnet, britholite, monazite have been proposed for immobilization
of Pu-bearing wastes. Synthetic materials for immobilization of radioactive wastes
have been studied for about 15 years at the Institute of Geology of Ore Deposits,
Russian Academy of Sciences. In this chapter we have summarized briey some of
the results obtained.
From a structural-chemical perspective, host phases stable upon wide variations
of waste compositions are preferable. Such phases can be used for immobilization
of excess plutonium or more complex wastes, i.e. actinide-Zr-REE fraction of HLW,
actinides, long-lived ssion products (93 Zr, 99 Tc, 126 Sn) and so on. The search for
HLW forms can be optimized by preliminary analysis of the crystal structures of
promising phases. It allows reducing amount of potential compounds, which simplies further experimental examination of the selected materials. The efciency
of such approach was demonstrated for titanates and aluminates with zirconolite
and perovskite structures (Fielding and White 1987). We have applied this approach
for matrices with pyrochlore- and garnet-type structures. These results helped us to
select the phases with the highest capacity to incorporate actinides. Data on the irradiation behavior of natural minerals of britholite group are also discussed in this
communication.
195
196
of the ionic radii of actinides, we can predict the stability of pyrochlore-type phases
with Cm, Am, and Pu. Unlike Cm3+ , the Pu3+ and Am3+ titanates have monoclinic
symmetry as light REE titanates. This is related to their larger ionic radii than is
necessary for the stability of the pyrochlore structure. However, regardless of the
instability of Pu2 Ti2 O7 and Am2 Ti2 O7 pyrochlores, titanate pyrochlores with signicant amounts of Pu and Am were synthesized (Shoup and Bambergher 1997).
They are the solid solutions where lanthanide cations with smaller radii stabilize the
pyrochlore structure. It was found that pyrochlore based on Gd2 Ti2 O7 can include
16 mol % Pu2 Ti2 O7 . The proportion of the Pu2 Ti2 O7 end member increases with
decreasing radius of the rare-earth elements up to 22 mol % in pyrochlore based
on Er2 Ti2 O7 and up to 33 mol % in the Lu2 Ti2 O7 pyrochlore. The proportion of
Am end member in the (Er, Am)2 Ti2 O7 pyrochlore solid solution is still higher (61
mol %). The same result can also be obtained by replacement of Ti in octahedral
sites by larger cations of Sn, Hf, and Zr, which stabilize the pyrochlore structure of
the [(Pu, Am)2 (Ti, Sn, Hf, Zr)2 O7 ] phase.
Wastes from reprocessing of irradiated nuclear fuel are dominated by elements
with stable tetravalent cations (U, Np, Pu), only a small amount of which can be
incorporated in A2 B2 O7 pyrochlores. Because of a charge difference, substitution
of actinides for REEs in the lattice increases the amount of vacancies by 4REE3+ =
3U4+ + [vacancy], i.e., increases the deciency of the structure. The scale of this
substitution is relatively low. According to our data, Y-Ti pyrochlore can contain
up to 12 wt % UO2 , i.e., 0.2 U atoms per formula. The charge balance of the structure can be also maintained by replacement of two REE cations by pair of divalent
ion (e.g., Ca2+ ) and tetravalent actinide. Such a replacement results in formation
of pyrochlore VIII (CaAn4+ )VI (B4+ )2 O7 with one actinide atom per formula. Thus,
the amount of actinide increases by ve times compared to the previous substitution
type. Phases VIII (CaAn4+ )VI (B4+ )2 O7 can be predicted from comparison of radii of
cations in REE pyrochlores (A3+ )2 (B4+ )2 O7 and the effective radius of the Ca2+ +
An4+ pairs, where An = Th, U, Np, Pu. An effective radius of the cationic pair falling
within the interval typical of a stable pyrochlore structure can indicate the possible
stability of corresponding actinide compounds. The (Ca2+ + U4+ ) and (Ca2+ +
Np4+ ) pairs, with respective effective radii of 1.06 and 1.05 , which are close to
the radius of Gd3+ , compose many phases with Ti4+ , Sn4+ , Zr4+ , and Hf4+ cations.
Incorporation of larger (e.g., Th4+ ) or smaller (e.g., Pu4+ ) cations causes changes
in the effective ionic radius and decreases the number of possible pyrochlore-type
compounds. The latter are stannates, hafnates, and zirconates for Th4+ ,and only
stannates and titanates for Pu4+ . It is theoretically possible for Ca2+ to be replaced
by Sr2+ (1.26 ) in VIII (CaAn4+ )VI (B4+ )2 O7 pyrochlore, which allows incorporation of ssion products together with tetravalent actinides in a single-phase matrix.
However, our data have showed that the synthesis of SrTh pyrochlores was not
successful.
Pyrochlores with the compositions CaUTi2 O7 and CaCeTi2 O7 (Ce serves as an
imitator of Pu) were synthesized (Ringwood 1985; Xu et al. 2000). The phases
Ca(Pu, U, Zr)Ti2 O7 and Ca(Np, Zr)Ti2 O7 with 45 wt % PuO2 and NpO2 (or
0.81 Pu or Np atoms per formula) were also obtained (Vance et al. 1995). The
197
titanate pyrochlore is the main phase of matrices for immobilization of wastes with
high actinide content, e.g., irradiated nuclear fuel. By analogy with the other materials, this ceramic was called Synroc-F (where F is an abbreviation of fuel). Matrices composed of 80%90% pyrochlore are considered in the United States to be the
most promising forms for immobilization of the excess weapons Pu (Ebbinghaus
et al. 1998). Samples with Ce, Th, U, and Pu were obtained by cold pressing followed by sintering at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in the United
States. The optimal composition of such pyrochlore corresponds to a solid solution
of CaUTi2 O7 , CaPuTi2 O7 , and Gd2 Hf2 O7 in proportion of 2 : 1 : 1.
198
Pyrochlores
The pyrochlores with Ti and Sn were formed most rapidly, while the slowest synthesis is characteristic of Zr-based systems. Pyrochlore is the major or single phase
in most of the samples (Fig. 1, Table 1). Titanate matrices contain brannerite, perovskite, and a cubic uorite-type oxide. Pyrochlore in the zirconate matrices was
found only in the Th-bearing samples. The replacement of Th by U in zirconates
was resulted in the formation of a uorite-type oxide instead of pyrochlore. Except
for the phases in the CaUTiO and CaCeTiO systems the other pyrochlores
were synthesized for the rst time.
Data on these phases are absent in the X-ray diffraction databases. Their common feature is a deciency of cations in the VIII-coordinated site of their formulas.
A part of Zr4+ cations could also occupy the eight-coordinated sites. The substitution of U for Th in CaThZr2 O7 and (Ca0.5 GdTh0.5 )Zr2 O7 matrices makes the
pyrochlore structure unstable. This is probably related to smaller radius of U4+
(1.0 ) as compared to radius of Th4+ (1.05 ). As a result, the ratio of ionic radii in
the A and B sites decreases beyond the range characteristic of the pyrochloretype structures. The replacement of Zr4+ by smaller Ti4+ ions increases this ratio
and stabilizes (CaU)(ZrTi)O7 and (Ca0.5 GdU0.5 )(ZrTi)O7 pyrochlores. Sr-Th pyrochlores have not been synthesized, even with the largest Sn4+ and Zr4+ cations
in the six-coordinated site, regardless of the formal consistence of ratio of ionic
radii to requirements of geometrical stability. From the batches with SrThSn2 O7
and SrThZr2 O7 stoichiometry oxides with uorite and perovskite structures as well
as SnO2 were obtained instead of pyrochlore. Data on correlation of composition
with structure should be taken into account in selecting matrices for actinide-bearing
wastes, particularly for complex wastes, e.g., the actinide-Zr-REE fraction of HLW.
The radii of six-coordinated cations of pyrochlore phases with REE and trivalent
actinides vary from 0.55 to 0.75 . The Ti4+ , Sn4+ , Hf4+ , Zr4+ as well as Tc4+ ,
with radius of 0.65 , are within this interval. The capacity of pyrochlore structure
to incorporate tetravalent actinides increases if it simultaneously includes Ca2+ .
199
Fig. 1 SEM/bse images of ceramics with bulk composition: CaUTi2 O7 (A), CaCeTi2 O7 (B),
CaThSn2 O7 (C), CaThZr2 O7 (D), CaUZr2 O7 (E), (Ca0.5 GdTh0.5 )Zr2 O7 (F), (Ca0.5 GdTh0.5 )
(ZrTi)O7 (G), and (Ca0.5 GdU0.5 )(ZrTi)O7 (H). Black pores. Scale bars = 50 m. Data from
Laverov et al. (2002)
Garnets
Garnet structure ferrites VIII AVI
3 B2 [XO4 ]3 , Ia3d, Z = 8 are considered to be promising actinide host phases. U and Th contents in natural garnets dont exceed fractions
of percent. Therefore, unlike some well-known phases (pyrochlore, zirconolite,
etc.) garnets with actinide may be selected from synthetic phases study only. Earlier we have synthesized the garnets (Ca, Gd, An)3 (Zr, Fe)2 [FeO4 ]3 in which
200
Table 1 Phases observed in the samples and compositions (formulae) of the pyrochlores
Initial batch composition
Phases found
CaUTi2 O7 (A on Fig. 1)
Py > Br
CaCeTi2 O7 (B)
Gd2 Ti2 O7
Py
CaThZr2 O7 (D)
Py > Pe Fso
CaUZr2 O7 (E on Fig. 1)
Co
Co
The same
Py >> Fso
Py >> Fso
Py Fso
Fig. 2 SEM/bse images of the garnet samples with formulations: (Ca1,5 GdTh0,5 )
(ZrFe4 )O12 (left), (Ca1,2 Gd1,6 Th0,2 )(Zr0,5 Fe1,5 )(Si0,6 Al1,3 Fe1,1 )O12 (middle) and (Ca0.67 Na0.3
Gd1.92 Th0.11 )(Fe3.88 Zr0.39 Si0.58 )O12 (right). Left: gray garnet; middle: gray garnet, dark
hibonite (CaFe12 O19 ), white ThO2 , inset SAED pattern from plane (111)* in the garnet
structure; right: gray garnet, light ZrO2 , white ThO2 , dark Fe2 O3 , black pores. Scale
bars = 50 m
ThO2
is appeared
Th4+
ThO2
is appeared
Th4+
ThO2
is appeared
0.4
Th4+
Fig. 3 Inuence of
temperature and impurities on
Th content in garnet (atoms
per formula unit)
201
0.2
T = 1200 C
T = 1300 C
T = 1400 C
0
0
Al3+
T = 1200 C
T = 1300 C
Sn4+ Al3+
0.6
Na+ + Si4+
Fig. 4 Left: XRD patterns of garnet with 2% 244 Cm. G garnet, T ThO2 . Doses accumulated:
1 1.51017 (0.01); 2 4.51017 (0.04); 3 11018 (0.09); 4 1.331018 (0.11); 5 1.61018 decays/g (0.16 dpa). It was suggested that curium entered the garnet phase only. From Lukinykh
et al. (2007). Right: TEM and HRTEM images of garnet similar in composition before (a) and
after irradiation with 1 MeV Kr2+ to doses of 0.06 dpa (b), 0.12 dpa (c), and 0.17 dpa (d). From
Utsunomiya et al. (2005)
202
garnet and traces of ThO2 (Fig. 4, left). Kr ions irradiation (Utsunomiya et al. 2005).
Garnets Ca1.50 Gd1.03 Ce0.53 Zr1.21 Fe3.82 O12 , Ca2.40 Ce0.60 Zr2.08 Fe3.03 O12 , Ca1.44
Gd0.98 Th0.53 Zr1.06 Fe3.92 O12 , and Ca2.37 Th0.56 Zr2.03 Fe2.96 O12 were irradiated by 1
MeV Kr2+ ions within 2981073 . Lattice damage was observed by TEM and
HRTEM (Fig. 4, right). Critical dose (Dc ) at 298 K was found to be 0.17 dpa and
equal to results from the Cm-doping experiments. The Dc increased with temperature, and the Tc values range between 820 and 870 K (Utsunomiya et al. 2005).
Table 2 Normalized leach rates from the initial garnet-based ceramic and after its amorphization
Element
Leaching
period, days
Amorphous
Cm
3
7
14
5.3
2.4 103
1.4 103
2.2 102
1.1 102
5.8 103
Ca
3
7
14
3.6 101
2.2 101
2.5 101
3.1 101
3.8 101
2.7 101
Fe
3
7
14
1.4 101
2.9 101
2.8 101
1.6 101
1.9 102
1.8 102
203
Fig. 5 Left: leach rates of Ce from the Sample 21 in MCC-2 (150 C) and MCC-1 (90 C). Right:
leach rate of Th from the Sample 312 in various media in MCC-2 test at 150 C. u unpolished
surface of the pellet, p polished surface of the sample
Fig. 6 Britholite in devitried BSi glass (left) and SEM images of natural mineral (right)
204
Ca atoms occupy the nine-coordinated polyhedra and REE atoms ll the sevencoordinated polyhedra. BO4 tetrahedra are located between the nine- and sevenvertex polyhedra. Natural britholites are commonly metamict due to high Th and
U content. Six britholites from alkaline rocks of various massifs in Russia were
examined. Age of the minerals ranges between 320 my and 2600 my and total
ThO2 +UO2 content ranges between 1 and 12 wt % (Livshits 2006). Two amorphous
samples were also annealed at 750 C and 800 C for 6 h. The dynamics of structural
recovery in the metamict britholite was studied with differential thermal analysis at
heating rate of 10 C/min. In order to examine stages of the recrystallization process, one metamict sample (#1775) was heat-treated at temperatures of 100, 300 C
for 7 h and 500, 600, 750, 800 C for 5 h. According to SEM/EDS data, the total
in analysis of the britholites dont exceed 9095 wt %, implying an occurrence of
water (as OH or H2 O) and B2 O3 in their compositions. Based on the data of ThO2
and UO2 contents and ages, the cumulative doses have been calculated (Table 3).
The doses range between 0.61019 -decays/g (0.5 dpa) and 7.71019 -decays/g
(6.6 dpa). Figure 7, left shows the XRD patterns and SAED of britholites with various doses (and degree of the lattice damage). XRD pattern of the britholite whose
structure was recovered after heating at 750 C is also shown for comparison. XRD
patterns for the specimens #65863 (0.5 dpa) and #1769 (1.2 dpa) reveal only two
diffused peaks at the position of major britholite reections, (211) and (210). The
SAED patterns of these samples show some diffraction maxima and diffused halo.
The intensity of halo is relatively high. Both XRD and SAED patterns indicate that
a large volume of amorphous domains is present in the structures of these britholites. XRD pattern of the sample #1775 (2.8 dpa) reveals no diffraction maxima,
SAED patterns demonstrate a broad halo, indicating that the structure is fully amorphous. Samples #89510, Brit-8, and #1771 were also characterized as amorphous.
So, the minerals with cumulative dose >1 dpa (>0.91019 -decays/g) are amorphous. Critical dose of the samples is close to the results obtained earlier for a single
sample (Gong et al. 1997).
To conrm that the amorphous samples #1775 (Fig. 6, right; Fig. 7) and #65863
belong to the britholite group, these specimens were annealed at 750800 C for 6 h.
The annealing resulted in recovery of the apatite type structure without appearance
Table 3 U and Th contents in the britholites investigated and calculated cumulative doses (D)
Sample
UO2 , wt %
ThO2 , wt %
D1019 ,
-decays/g
D, dpa
65863
1769
Brit-8
89510
1775
1771
< 0.2
< 0.6
< 0.6
0.81 (0.21.2)2
< 0.7
1.91 (1.52.7)2
1.4 (2.10.9)
4.1 (3.05.3)
1.0 (0.82.3)
11.1 (9.812.1)
4.1 (3.84.6)
0.6 (0.31.5)
1.5 (0.92.2)
0.9 (0.71.2)
1.9 (1.52.2)
3.2 (2.33.7)
7.7 (8.77.2)
0.5 (0.31.3)
1.2 (0.91.8)
0.8 (0.61.0)
1.5 (1.21.8)
2.8 (2.13.4)
6.6 (6.47.1)
1
2
205
Fig. 7 XRD and SAED patterns of britholites examined (left) and XRD patterns for the sample
#1775 after heating for 5 h at different temperatures (right) for recovery of the initial structure
of the other phases. A change in the chemical composition after annealing is due to
decrease of uorine content. Investigation of re-crystallization in the samples Brit-8,
#1775 and #65863 by DTA method has shown that there are exothermic peaks at
480, 720750, and 520 C due to the phases structure recovery. The difference in
re-crystallization temperatures is likely due to the different degree of disordering of
the initial samples. Sample #1775 is fully amorphous whereas the structures of the
samples #65863 and Brit-8 are less disordered. Therefore, re-crystallization temperatures for samples #65863 and Brit-8 are lower than that for the sample #1775.
At the Fig. 7 (right) a series of the XRD patterns is shown after heating at 100,
300 C for 7 h and 500, 600, 750, and 800 C for 5 h on the initially amorphous
sample #1775. Peaks at XRD patterns start to appear at the temperature close to
500 C.
The structure of the mineral is completely recovered between 500 and 600 C.
Above the latter XRD pattern does not change signicantly. The dose required
to cause amorphization in synthetic britholite by heavy ions irradiation at room
temperature is about 0.20.4 dpa (Utsunomiya et al. 2003). Critical dose of the
natural britholites is about 1 dpa (0.91019 -decays/g) that is higher than for
synthetic samples because of recovery of the structure with time in the long geological periods. The similar difference is typical of the other natural radioactive
minerals (pyrochlore, zirconolite) and their irradiated synthetic analogs suggested as
promising actinide hosts (Ewing and Lutze 1988; Ringwood 1984; Lumpkin 2001;
Omelianenko et al. 2007).
206
Conclusions
Results of our research have showed that safe immobilization of the long-lived actinides can be provided with optimal selection of the durable connement matrices
(actinide waste forms), such as pyrochlore, britholite or ferrites with garnet-type
structure.
Acknowledgements This work was supported by the Russian Foundation for Basic Research (0505-64005) and US Department of Energy (RUC2-20009-MO-04). S. Yudintsev thanks organizers
of the workshop Minerals as Advanced Materials for invitation to participate in its activity and
the scientists from various Russian and American organizations collaborating in the actinide waste
forms examination: M.I. Lapina, A.V. Mokhov, B.S. Nikonov, and B.I. Omelianenko (IGEM RAS),
N.S. Mikhailenko, A.G. Ptashkin, O.I. Stefanovsky, and S.V. Stefanovsky (SIA Radon), A.A. Lizin,
A.N. Lukinykh, S.V. Tomilin (RIIAR), R.C. Ewing, J. Lian, and S. Utsunomiya (University of
Michigan, USA).
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Introduction
Crystalline ceramics are the most prospective materials suggested for the immobilization of long-lived radionulcides, in particular, weapons grade Pu and other
actinides. The immobilization might include: (1) transmutation (burning) followed
by geological disposal of irradiated materials or (2) just direct geological disposal of actinide matrices. Different durable host phases have been suggested for
actinide (An) incorporation in the form of solid solutions. These are: different polymorphs of zirconia, (Zr,An,. . . )O2 , in particular, one of cubic uorite-type structure (Carroll, 1963; Heimann and Vandergraaf 1988); zircon, (Zr,Hf,An,. . . )SiO4
(Burakov, 1993; Ewing et al., 1995); monazite, (La,An,. . .)PO4 (Boatner et al., 1980;
Boatner and Sales 1988); Ti-pyrochlore, (Ca,Gd,Hf,Pu,U)2 Ti2 O7 (Ebbinghaus et al.,
1998) etc. To investigate the resistance of actinide host phases to accelerated radiation damage, which simulates effects of long term storage the 238 Pu-doped samples
of cubic zirconia and plutonia, zircon, La-monazite, Pu-monazite and Ti-pyrochlore
have been repeatedly studied using X-ray diffraction analysis (XRD) and other
methods. Main goal of this chapter was to summarize in comparison the principal features of different actinide host materials under self-irradiation from 238 Pu.
All results described in this chapter have been obtained during last several years
in Laboratory of Applied Mineralogy and Radiogeochemistry of the V. G. Khlopin
Radium Institute.
Polycrystalline 238 Pu-doped samples of Ti-pyrochlore, (Ca,Gd,Hf,Pu,U)2 Ti2 O7
(Burakov, 2002; Burakov and Anderson, 2002); gadolinia-stabilized cubic zirconia,
Zr0.79 Gd0.14 Pu0.07 O1.99 (Burakov et al., 2002, 2003); zircon/zirconia based ceramic,
Boris E. Burakov, Maria A. Yagovkina, Maria V. Zamoryanskaya, Marina A. Petrova,
Yana V. Domracheva, Ekaterina V. Kolesnikova, Larisa D. Nikolaeva, Vladimir M. Garbuzov,
Alexander A. Kitsay and Vladimir A. Zirlin
Laboratory of Applied Mineralogy and Radiogeochemistry, V.G. Khlopin Radium Institute,
2-nd Site, KIRSI-branch, 1, Roentgen Street, St. Petersburg 197101, Russia, e-mail:
[email protected]
209
210
(Zr,Pu)SiO4 /(Zr,Pu)O2 (Burakov et al., 2003) and single crystal zircon, (Zr,Pu)SiO4
(Hanchar et al., 2003), were obtained from previous research. Other 238 Pu-doped
samples such as: La-monazite, (La,Pu)PO4 , and Pu-phosphate, PuPO4 , with monazite structure were obtained through cold pressing of co-precipitated and calcined
hydroxide precursors followed by sintering in air at temperature 12001500 C. The
repeated XRD measurements were carried out at ambient temperature after different cumulative dose using special technique developed at the V.G. Khlopin Radium
Institute (Burakov, 2000). In this method, the highly radioactive sample is placed
into regular XRD holder, which is then hermetically covered by thin (50100 m)
Be-window. This avoids contamination of the X-ray diffractometer during analysis.
All XRD analyses were carried out under the same conditions: Co K irradiation;
current40 mA; tube voltage30 kV, scan speed2 degrees/min, step analysis0.01
degree.
The partial results of repeated XRD analyses collected during approximately two
years are shown in Figs. 15.
The Ti-pyrochlore became amorphous at cumulative dose of (1.11.3) 1025
alpha decays/m3 (Fig. 1). This was accompanied by decrease of ceramic density
of approximately 10% in comparison with initial fresh sample. Many cracks have
been observed by optical microscope in ceramic matrix after dose 5.7 1024 alpha decays/m3 . Unfortunately, an initial ceramic sample has not been studied by
optical microscopy immediately after synthesis. The same situation took place
with electron microprobe analysis (EMPA) of this sample. At cumulative dose
5.7 1024 alpha decays/m3 an essential chemical inhomogeneity of pyrochlore
phase has been observed. The simplied variation of the estimated pyrochlore
(222)
(400)
BeO
CPS
1600
(311)
BeO+Py
1
1200
2
3
800
4
400
0
25
5
6
30
35
40
2, degree
45
50
211
Be
CPS
Zr(200)
Zr(101)
Zr(112) Zr(301)
ZO(101) Zr(211)
6000
BeO BeO
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
3000
0
20
30
40
2, degree
50
Fig. 2 X-ray diffraction patterns of 238 Pu-doped ceramic based on zircon (Zr) and minor phase,
tetragonal zirconia (ZO), after cumulative dose (in alpha decay/m3 1023 ): (1) 3.2; (2) 13; (3) 30;
(4) 51; (5) 65; (6) 91; (7) 113; (8) 134; (9) 151; (10) 166
formula was Ca0.9 (U0.30.5 Pu0.20.5 Gd0.10.2 Hf0.10.2 )Ti2 O7 , however, there are no
EMPA data for the initial sample. Some new-formed (?) inclusions of (U,Pu)Ox and
(Hf,Ti,Ca)Ox were identied in ceramic matrix by scanning electron microscopy
(SEM). In according to our visual observation from SEM the amount of these
inclusions increased depending on cumulative dose. This correlates with shift of
main pyrochlore peaks (222) and (400) depending on cumulative dose to the low
angle direction (Fig. 1) that corresponds to position of pure Ti-pyrochlore phase,
Gd2 Ti2 O7 . We assumed that self-irradiation might cause partial destruction of solid
solution, (Ca,Gd,Hf,Pu,U)2 Ti2 O7 , into different phases such as: Ti-pyrochlore with
less amount of impurities, in particular, U and Pu; (U,Pu)Ox and (Hf,Ti,Ca)Ox .
Self-irradiation of zircon based ceramic caused amorphization of zircon phase at
cumulative dose (1.31.5) 1025 alpha decays/m3 (Fig. 2).
CPS
12000
1
8000
2
3
4
4000
6
7
33.0
8
36.0
Fig. 3 Behavior of (111) XRD reection of gadolinia-stabilized cubic zirconia doped with
9.9 wt.% 238 Pu after cumulative dose (alpha decay/m3 1023 ): (1) 3; (2) 27; (3) 62; (4) 110;
(5) 134; (6) 188; (7) 234; (8) 277
212
Fig. 4 X-ray diffraction
patterns of La-monazite,
(La,Pu)PO4 , doped with
8.1 wt.% 238 Pu depending
on cumulative dose (alpha
decay/m3 1023 ): (1) 1.5;
(2) 19; (3) 47; (4) 72; (5) 93;
(6) 119
(002)
(200)
(012)
(210)
(020)
(202)
6
3000
5
4
3
2
1
0
30
35
2, degree
40
In general, such a behavior of zircon under radiation damage has been expectable
and it well correlated with increase of unit cell parameters depending on cumulative
dose (Table 1). However, the unusual delay of zircon amorphization has been observed between doses 9.1 1024 and 1.13 1025 alpha decays/m3 (Fig. 2, Table 1).
Tetragonalzirconia, (Zr,Pu)O2 , which was a minor phase in zircon based ceramic, has demonstrated signicantly higher resistance to radiation damage in comparison with zircon (Fig. 2). No evidence of ceramic matrix swelling or cracking was
found by optical microscopy after zircon amorphization. Self-irradiation changed
color of 238 Pu-doped single crystal zircon from initial pink-brown to yellow-gray
and caused essential crack formation in crystal matrices (Fig. 6). We assumed that
main reason of crack formation in zircon single crystals was not just swelling but
inhomegeneous (zoned) Pu distribution in crystal matrices.
Gadolinia-stabilized cubic zirconia, Zr0.79 Gd0.14 Pu0.07 O1.99 , retained crystalline structure after extremely high dose of self-irradiation, 2.77 1025 alpha
decay/m3 (Fig. 3). No changes in the measured ceramic density, matrix swelling,
BeO
(210)
(211)
CPS
2400
BeO
BeO
(020) (120)
(11 2)(21 1)
(111) (200)
(20 2)
Be
(23 1)
1
1600
2
800
3
30
50
40
2, degree
60
213
Table 1 Unit cell parameters of 238 Pu-doped zircon, (Zr,Pu)SiO4 , depending on cumulative dose
Cumulative dose,
alpha
decay/m3 1023
3.2
13
30
51
65
91
113
134, 151, 166
6.639(5)
6.642(5)
6.654(5)
6.668(5)
6.679(6)
6.689(5)
6.689(2)
6.014(10)
6.019(10)
6.035(10)
6.04(1)
6.05(1)
6.06(1)
6.07(1)
214
Unit cell
parameters, A
Miller indices
(111)
3
27
62
110
134
188
234
277
5.212(20)
5.213(20)
5.214(20)
5.215(20)
5.216(20)
5.216(20)
5.216(20)
5.216(20)
(200)
(220)
Int. W
FWHM
Int. W
FWHM
Int. W
FWHM
0.221
0.224
0.224
0.225
0.223
0.103
0.105
0.107
0.215
0.216
0.218
0.220
0.216
0.093
0.094
0.095
0.238
0.235
0.233
0.240
0.231
0.102
0.102
0.102
0.230
0.227
0.225
0.232
0.223
0.092
0.092
0.880
0.246
0.248
0.248
0.246
0.103
0.102
0.106
0.228
0.230
0.230
0.227
0.094
0.093
0.095
215
Table 3 Features of main XRD reections of 238 Pu-doped La-monazite, (La,Pu)PO4 , depending
on cumulative dose (CD). FWHM is full width on the half maximum and Int.W is integrated width,
degrees
CD, /m3 1023
Miller indices
(200)
1.5
19
47
72
93
119
(002)
(012)
(202)
Int. W
FWHM
Int.W
FWHM
Int. W
FWHM
Int. W
FWHM
0.164
0.143
0.145
0.175
0.151
0.159
0.163
0.155
0.158
0.179
0.128
0.145
0.138
0.127
0.181
0.192
0.158
0.156
0.148
0.130
0.180
0.194
0.146
0.147
0.194
0.132
0.179
0.234
0.201
0.185
0.192
0.142
0.198
0.230
0.204
0.171
0.118
0.114
0.126
0.145
0.140
0.156
0.113
0.110
0.135
0.146
0.130
0.141
Table 4 Unit cell parameters of 238 Pu-doped La-monazite, (La,Pu)PO4 , depending on cumulative
dose
Cumulative dose, alpha
decay/m3 1023
1.5
19
47
72
93
119
6.89(1)
6.89(1)
6.92(1)
6.93(1)
6.89(1)
6.90(1)
7.08(1)
7.10(1)
7.10(1)
7.11(1)
7.10(1)
7.11(1)
6.57(1)
6.57(1)
6.55(1)
6.54(1)
6.57(1)
6.53(1)
216
Minor phases
(method of
analysis)
238 Pu content,
wt.% el.
Initial geometric
density, g/cm3
Dose of
amorphization,
alpha
decay/m3 1023
Zircon,
(Zr,Pu)SiO4
15% tetrag.
zirconia,
(Zr,Pu)O2 (XRD
and SEM)
No (XRD and
SEM)
4.6
4.4
9.9
5.8
No at 277
Ti-pyrochlore,
(Ca,Gd,Hf,Pu,U)2
Ti2 O7
4.9
110130
Ln-monazite,
(Ln,Pu)PO4
Pu-monazite,
PuPO4
No (XRD)
8.1
4.7
No at 119
3040% PuP2 O7
(XRD)
7.2
4.9
4245 for
Pu-monazite, but
less for PuP2 O7
Cubic zirconia,
Zr0.79 Gd0.14
Pu0.07 O1.99
5. The cubic zirconia of uorite-type structure has conrmed extremely high resistance to self-irradiation. No change of phase composition, matrix swelling, or
cracking in the gadolinia-stabilized cubic zirconia, Zr0.79 Gd0.14 Pu0.07 O1.99 , were
observed after cumulative dose 2.77 1025 alpha decay/m3 .
6. The 238 Pu-doped La-monazite, (La,Pu)PO4 , remained crystalline at cumulative
dose 1.19 1025 alpha decay/m3 . Under self-irradiation this sample changed the
color from initial light blue to gray. No swelling or crack formations have so far
been observed.
7. The Pu-phosphate of monazite structure, PuPO4 , became nearly completely
amorphous at a relatively low dose 4.2 1024 alpha decay/m3 . Minor phase in
the Pu-phosphate ceramic, e.g. PuP2 O7 , became amorphous earlier than PuPO4 .
Under self-irradiation Pu-phosphate sample completely changed color from initial deep blue to black. Essential swelling and crack formations as a result of
accelerated radiation damage were observed in this ceramic.
8. It is assumed on the basis of XRD data that self-irradiation of cubic zirconia,
Zr0.79 Gd0.14 Pu0.07 O1.99 and La-monazite, (La,Pu)PO4 , is accompanied with two
processes: accumulation of defects in crystalline structures and repeated selfannealing of those defects at ambient temperature.
217
References
Boatner LA, Beall GW, Abraham MM (1980) Scientic basis for nuclear waste management. In:
Northrup CJM Jr (ed). vol 2. Plenum Press, New York, pp 289296
Boatner LA, Sales BC (1988) Monazite In: Lutze W, Ewing RC (eds) Radioactive waste forms for
the future, vol B. Elsevier Science Publishers, Amsterdam, pp 495564
Burakov B (1993) A Study of high-uranium technogeneous zircon (Zr,U)SiO4 from chernobyl
Lavas in connection with the problem of creating a crystalline matrix for high-level waste
disposal. Proc SAFE WASTE93 13-18/06/1993 Avignon France 2:1928
Burakov BE, Anderson EB (2000) Excess weapons plutonium immobilization in Russia. In: Jardine JL, Borisov GB, (eds). UCRL-ID-138361, Proc. Meeting for Coordination and Review of
Work, St. Petersburg, Russia, 1-4/11/1999, 167-179 and 251252
Burakov B, Anderson E (2002) Summary of Pu ceramics developed for Pu immobilization
(B506216, B512161). In: Jardine LJ, Borisov GB (eds) Review of excess weapons disposition: LLNL contract work in russia, Proc 3-rd Ann Meeting Coord Review of LLNL Work,
St. Petersburg, Russia, January 1418, 2002, UCRL-ID-149341, pp 265270
Burakov B, Anderson E, Yagovkina M, Zamoryanskaya M, Nikolaeva E (2002) Behavior of 238 Pudoped ceramics based on cubic zirconia and pyrochlore under radiation damage. J Nucl Sci
Technol 3:733736
Burakov BE, Anderson EB, Zamoryanskaya MV, Yagovkina MA, Nikolaeva EV (2002) Synthesis
and characterization of cubic zirconia, (Zr,Gd,Pu)O2 , doped with 238 Pu. Mater Res Soc Symp
Proc, Scientic Basis for Nuclear Waste Management XXV 713:333336
Burakov BE, Yagovkina MA, Pankov AS (2003) Behavior of zircon-based ceramic doped with
238 Pu under self-irradiation. CD-ROM Proceedings of International Conference Plutonium Future The Science, Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA, July 6-10, 2003, CP673, pp 274275
Carroll D (1963) The system PuO2 -ZrO2 . J Am Ceram Soc 46(4):194
Ebbinghaus B, VanKonynenburg R, Ryerson F (1998) Ceramic formulation for the immobilization
of plutonium. Proc Intern Symp WASTE MANAGEMENT-98, Tucson, AZ, USA, 1998, CD
version, Rep 6504
Ewing R, Lutze W, Weber W (1995) Zircon: A host-phase for the disposal of weapons plutonium.
J Mater Res 10:243246
Hanchar JM, Burakov BE, Anderson EB, Zamoryanskaya MV (2003) Investigation of single crystal zircon, (Zr,Pu)SiO4 , doped with 238 Pu and 239 Pu. Materials Research Society Symposium
Proceedings, Scientic Basis for Nuclear Waste Management XXVI, pp 215225
Heimann R, Vandergraaf T (1988) Cubic zirconia as a candidate waste form for actinides: dissolution studies. J Mater Sci Lett 7:583
219
220
I.G. Tananaev
Solid bituminous substances (SBS) are known as usual components of late hydrothermal parageneses in peralkaline pegmatites of the Khibiny and Lovozero
agpaitic massifs at Kola peninsula, Russia (Antonov et al., 1933; Labuntsov, 1937;
Petersile, 1959, 1960, 1964; Linde, 1961; Sokolova, 1965; Zezin and Sokolova,
1967; Florovskaya et al., 1968; Loskutov and Polezhaeva, 1968; Pekov, 1998, 2001;
Chukanov et al., 2005, 2006; Kartashov et al., 2006). The following occurrences of
SBS are the most common:
1. Macroscopic (from 0.1 mm to 12 cm) spheroidal or drop-like segregations of
black or dark-brown bituminous substance overgrowing (or included in) aggregates of different minerals of late hydrothermal assemblages. Very often microporous hetero-framework zeolite-like silicates (MHFZ) with Ti, Nb or Zr (elpidite,
labuntsovite- and hilairite-group minerals, umbite, paraumbite etc.) are substrates
for SBS. Association of bitumen-like substances with aluminosilicate zeolites
and alkaline heterophyllosilicates (murmanite, lomonosovite, astrophyllite- and
lamprophyllite-group minerals) is also typical. Sometimes abundant organic substances are present in cavities with MHFZ whereas in neighbouting cavities without MHFZ, bituminous substances are absent.
2. SBS are habitual microscopic inclusions in thorium minerals formed in peralkaline pegmatites of the Khibiny and Lovozero massifs on hydrothermal stage:
thorite, steacyite, Na,Th- and Na,Ti,Th-silicates, Th-phosphate, Th-bearing
karnasurtite-(Ce).
Nikita V. Chukanov
Institute of Problems of Chemical Physics Russian Academy of Science, Chernogolovka, Moscow
region, Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
Igor V. Pekov
Faculty of Geology, Moscow State University, 119991 Moscow, Russia
Institute of Geochemistry and Analytical Chemistry, 119991 Moscow, Russia
Vera N. Ermolaeva
Institute of Geochemistry and Analytical Chemistry, 119991 Moscow, Russia
221
222
3. In hydrothermal bodies of the Lovozero massif, abundant SBS have been detected in micro-heterogeneous aggregates forming rims around grains of Th- and
REE-minerals (karnasurtite-(Ce), Na,Th-silicate, belovite-(Ce), etc.).
4. High concentrations of microscopic inclusions of SBS are typical for polymineral
pseudomorphs after steenstrupine-(Ce) formed on hydrothermal stage (Shkatulka
pegmatite, Lovozero).
5. Often lms of SBS cover surfaces of mineral aggregates in cavities. Close association of SBS with MHFZ is very typical.
By IR spectroscopic and X-ray diffraction data (Chukanov et al., 2005), macroscopic aggregations of bituminiferous substances in pegmatites of the Lovozero
massif are usually characterized by high contents of aliphatic hydrocarbons. They
are enriched by sulfur and sodium but depleted in oxygen and rare elements. More
rarely aromatic organic substances are also present in rather high concentrations.
SBS from the pegmatites of the Khibiny massif have lower average sulfur content and are enriched by derivatives of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons containing
hydroxyl, carbonyl, carboxyl and carboxylate groups, as well as water molecules.
Usually they contain alkaline-earth and other elements in the form of carboxylate
salts M 2+ (ArCOO )2 (where Ar is a polycyclic aromatic radical; M = Ca, Sr, Ba,
Pb, REE) and microscopic inclusions of mineral phases with Th, REE, Nb and Ti.
Carbon-bearing substances in peralkaline pegmatites of the Khibiny massif are
known as concentrators of rare-earth elements for a long time. The most known
example is so-called carbocer that was rst described in natrolitized pegmatite
located in Loparskaya valley. Soluble part of solid rest after combustion of this substance contained 8.2 wt.% REE2 O3 (Antonov et al., 1933). The typical carbocer
(Table 1) contains 71.94 wt.% C, 7.01% H, 1.12% N, 0.12% S and 18.89% O, the
solid rest after combustion reaching 15% (Florovskaya et al., 1968). Our investigation of a bitumen enriched by heavy metals collected in a natrolitized pegmatite vein
at the Kukisvumchorr Mt., Khibiny, has demonstrated that it contains 7.2% ThO2
and only 1.1% REE2 O3 (Loskutov and Polezhaeva, 1968). Amorphous organic substance (with 5760% C and 5.1% H) and H2 O (2233%) are the main components
of this bitumen.
We have investigated original carbocer collected by A.N. Labuntsov in the period from 1931 to 1939 in the pegmatites of Loparskaya valley, Khibiny (## 40749,
41156, 41426, 44322 in the collection of Fersman Mineralogical Museum of the
Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow).
All samples investigated give similar IR spectra containing strong bands at
15711576, 13781414 and 12501260 cm1 and weaker bands in the range of
600670 cm1 . All these bands are assigned to vibrations of carboxylate groups
connected with polycyclic aromatic systems. Prevailing of condensed aromatic
structures in carbocer was demonstrated also by X-ray powder diffraction patterns. Along with carboxylate groups, carboxyl and/or carbonyl ones are present in
all samples (corresponding bands are observed in the range of 16951700 cm1 ).
Bands of CH stretching vibrations of aliphatic hydrocarbonic groups (the range of
28702970 cm1 ) are very weak; in the IR spectrum of the sample #40749 these
bands are absent.
223
40749
41426
41156
Na2 O
K2 O
CaO
SrO
MgO
FeO
ZnO
Al2 O3
ThO2
TiO2
SiO2
SO3
0.08
0.03
3.38
0.07
0.03
0.12
2.72
1.06
1.26
0.43
0.12
0.10
4.82
0.16
0.08
0.25
0.99
0.27
0.64
0.06
1.36
0.15
0.07
0.13
1.73
1.26
0.97
0.28
Total
9.18
7.43
6.06
In the IR spectra of all investigated carbocer samples, very strong and broad
bands of water molecules are observed in the range of 33453370 cm1 .
Bands of mineral phases (silicate, at 910 and 450 cm1 , and carbonate, at
875 cm1 ) are very weak and are absent in some samples. Bands of stretching vibrations of the CO3 2 groups are not observed since they overlap with much stronger
bands of the carboxylate groups, RCOO .
Comparative analysis of IR spectroscopic, electron microprobe and X-ray diffraction data shows that among silicate phases thorite is most common and the main
carbonate phase is calcite. Prevailing part of thorium, lanthanides, yttrium and other
heavy elements are present as metallo-organic complexes with carboxylate polycyclic aromatics and water molecules as ligands. Thorium (but not rare-earth elements as it was treated earlier) is the prevailing complex-forming metal. Silicon is
distributed between silicate phases with sizes >1 m and dispersed forms (probably
silico-organic groups or submicroscopic phases). Distribution of heavy elements in
the metallo-organic matrix is non-uniform; maximal local contents are (wt.%): 15.8
for Th, 1.4 for La; 2.6 for Ce; 2.25 for Nd; 3.4 for Y.
Mean contents of elements with atomic numbers >10 in three samples have
been obtained by electron microprobe analysis using defocused electron beam (see
Table 1). These data demonstrate that Ca, Th, Ti and Si are the main heavy components of carbocer.
Abundant bitumen-like substances similar to carbocer in their chemical composition and physical properties have been found by us in numerous peralkaline
pegmatites at the Mts. Koashva and Kukisvimchorr in Khibiny massif, together with
minerals formed on the hydrothermal stage. Thus solid organic substances enriched
by oxygen and water are common components of different late assemblages in the
Khibiny massif. These substances are effective concentrators of Th, REE, Y, Ca.
In organic phases, Th is present in the form of carboxylate salts in which carboxyl
224
groups are bonded to polycyclic hydrocarbon residuals of the naphthalene series (to
note: similar substances are often cancerogene). In most cases (including original
samples of carbocer collected by A.N. Labuntsov 70 years ago), Th strongly prevails over REE and Y. For this reason, the name carbocer seems non-reecting
real composition of these bitumen-like substances.
Most SBS enriched in oxydized aromatic compounds from aklaline pegmatites of
Khibiny are complex microheterogenous aggregations containing mineral, metalloorganic (with REE, Ca, Sr, and Ba) and essentially organic phases. Among inorganics, the following phases have been detected in such aggregates: calcite,
REE carbonates, thorite, steacyite, Na,Th-silicates Na25 ThTiSi8 (O,OH)24 nH2 O
and Na2 Th3 Si8 O23 nH2 O, Th- and U-silicates (Th,REE,Ca)1x Si(O,OH)4 nH2 O,
(Th,REE,Ca)(Ti,Nb) SiO6 nH2 O, NaUSi6 O14 (OH) nH2 O, Na2 U2 Si3 O11 nH2 O,
Na2 USi4 O11 nH2 O, (K,Ba)1.5 (Ca,Na)(Th,REE)(Ti,Nb)3 (Si,Al)8 (O,OH)x nH2 O,
(Th,REE)(Ti,Nb)-(Si,P)O6 nH2 O, NaCaK0.5 MnTh4 REE1x (Ti,Nb)2 Si8 (O,OH)x
nH2 O, (Na,Ca,K)2 (Zn,Ti)2 Th4 REE-(Si,Al)8 (O,OH)x nH2 O, an analog of seidite(Ce) with Th > REE, the phases Na5 REE2 (Si,P)6 O18 nH2 O, (Na,Ca)4 (Mn,Fe)
(Y,HREE,Th,U)2 Si12 O30 nH2 O, alkaline niobosilicates with (Nb+Ti):Si varying
from 3:2 to 3:1, rhabdophane-(Ce), rhabdophane-(Nd), monazite-(La), sazhinite(Ce), vitusite-(Ce) etc. (Chukanov et al., 2005, 2006; Ermolaeva et al., 2007, in
press). Separation of Y (+HREE), Ce, La, Nd, Th and U between organic and different mineral phases is an important distinctive feature of microheterogeneous aggregates containing SBS from the hydrothermal parageneses of peralkaline pegmatites.
Thus, close association of SBS with specic mineralization (minerals of lanthanides, yttrium, thorium and uranium on the one hand, and with MHFZ on
the other hand) is a well-established fact. In low-temperature assemblages of the
Khibiny and Lovozero agpaitic massifs, the highest concentrations of bitumen-like
substances are distinctly conned to large accumulations of microporous Ti-, Nband Zr-silicate minerals, namely elpidite, labuntsovite-group minerals and others.
Bright examples illustrating this conclusion are pegmatites Shomiokitovoye and
Elpiditovoye at the Alluaiv Mt., Lovozero massif. Both pegmatite bodies were
intensively altered by late peralkaline hydrothermal solutions. Shomiokitovoye
is remarkable as an yttrium anomaly, the outstanding accumulation of Y and
HREE concentrated in shomiokite-(Y), Na3 Y(CO3 )3 3H2 O, forming giant crystals. Yttrium mineralization is accompanied by abundant SBS, oxalates (mainly
natroxalate, Na2 C2 O4 ) and MHFZ (elpidite, korobitsynite etc.). The Elpiditovoye
pegmatite is remarkable as one of the largest and richest occurrences of MHFZ in
the Lovozero massif, mainly elpidite and recently described mineral caryochroite,
(Na,Sr)3 (Fe3+ ,Mg)10 (Ti2 Si12 O37 ) (H2 O,O,OH)17 . Besides it is characterized by a
very high concentration of SBS forming abundant macroscopic segregations on
MHFZ.
In the present work, a representative collection of Th- and REE-minerals from hydrothermal assemblages of the Khibiny and Lovozero massifs has been investigated.
All samples of these minerals show in IR spectra distinct bands of oxidized aromatic compounds due to abundant disperse inclusions of SBS. Some samples contain also aliphatic hydrocarbons. Associated Th- and REE-free minerals (zeolites,
225
226
near catalytic sites. For example, synthetic zeolite-like titanosilicate ETS-10 and its
ion-exchanged derivatives have been found to absorb H2 , CO, N2 , NO, C2 H4 and
NH3 (see review: Chukanov et al., 2004). Elpidite and kuzmenkoite-Mn (i.e. MHFZ
that are often accompanied by bitumen-type substances in alkaline pegmatites) behave as gas sorbents even under mild conditions (Chukanov and Pekov, 2005).
On the other hand, results of our recent investigations demonstrate signicant
geochemical role of microporous Ti-, Nb- and Zr-silicates on late stages of the formation of alkaline massifs as ion-exchangers (Pekov and Chukanov, 2005) and promotors of abiogenic formation of organic compounds, the latter being complexing
agents performing transport and concentration of rare and radioactive elements.
Synthetic micro- and mesoporous materials bearing transition elements, especially titanosilicates, are known as promising heterogeneous catalysts and catalyst
carriers for selective oxidation, reforming, polymerization and other reactions in
organic chemistry. In particular, modied microporous titanosilicates ETS-10 and
ETAS-10 are efcient catalysts of n-hexane reforming; ETS-10 was used as catalyst
of alkyne polymerization. Different reactions of selective oxidation of organic substrates on synthetic microporous Ti- and Nb-silicate catalysts have been described
recently (Chukanov et al., 2004). Various transition metals forming complexes with
aromatic hydroxyl compounds catalyze their reactions with O2 and CO to form aromatic carbonyl compounds (US Patent 6380417). Similar catalytic processes could
lead to the formation of different oxygen-bearing derivatives of naphthalene-series
hydrocarbons which are present in alkaline rocks.
Different oxygen-bearing organic, especially aromatic compounds are known
as effective complexing agents toward U, Th and REE. In particular, a new calyx[4]resorcinarene bearing 8 hydroxamic acid groups was shown to have high
afnity and selectivity towards Th (Jain et al., 2005); thorium and uranium complex of o-carboxy N N-domethylbenzylamine was prepared by Khan and Anwar
(2006); formation of thorium and uranium complexes with 4,5-dihydroxy-3,5benzenedisulfonate in aqueous solution was investigated by Silvester et al. (2001)
etc. Oxygen-rich aromatic components of heavy oil fractions (asphaltogenetic
resins), that are structurally similar to oxidized SBS from peralkaline pegmatites,
show strong afnity toward Th and U and extract these elements from aqueous solutions (Efendiev et al., 1964). Stability constants of Th(IV) to strong organic ligands
present in seawater are 106.6 108 (Santschi et al., 2006).
The formation of organic substances is possible only under sufciently reductive conditions. The main redox pairs in alkaline uids are Fe2+ Fe3+ , H2 O H2 ,
C CO CO CO2 . Typically, mass crystallization of aegirine precedes the formation of most abundant segregations of SBS. Obviously crystallization of aegirine
promotes reduction of carbon in the uid. The simplied mechanism of this reduction can be described by the following reactions in which oxidation degree of carbon
lowers from 4 to 2 and even to 0:
Na2 O + 2FeO + 4SiO2 + CO2 2NaFe3+ Si2 O6 + CO;
Na2 O + 2FeO + 4SiO2 + 0.5CO2 2NaFe3+ Si2 O6 + 0.5C.
227
In a more common case the reduction processes can involve water molecules,
with the formation of organic substances instead of carbon. In such processes, catalysts containing transition elements (titanium, zirconium, iron etc.) can play a key
role. For example, watergas-shift reaction H2 O+CO CO2 +H2 is known to be
catalyzed by La-doped titanium oxide (US patent 037528) and by supported iron
copper catalysts (Barrault et al., 1981). CeZr-supported non-noble metal catalysts
have been recently shown to give very high watergas shift activity at short contact
times at the temperatures 473973 K (Kumar and Khan 2007).
These data show that the pair of reagents H2 +CO (known in chemical technology as synthesis gas) can be formed in a reduced uid under mild conditions. In
industrial processes, synthesis gas is widely used for the synthesis of various organic compounds (see Bukur and Lang, 1999; Ruettinger et al., 2003; Pennline and
Pollack, 1986; Ge et al., 1997).
The above described facts indicate that organic substances are syngenetic with
alkaline rocks. Natural processes of their selective sorption, catalytic formation
and thansformations proceed in peralkaline pegmatites, hydrothermal bodies and
residual interstitial uids being promoted by zeolite-like microporous Ti-, Nb- and
Zr-silicates, as well as the formation of mobile complexes of rare and radioactive elements with components of SBS have close analogies in some technological
processes.
Acknowledgements This work was supported by the Russian Foundation for Basic Research
(grant 07-05-00130a), grant 4818.2006.5 of Leading Scientic School and grant MD-7230.2006.5
of the Foundation of the President of Russian Federation.
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Moran SB, Passow U, Roy-Barman M (2006) Thorium speciation in seawater. Mar Chem
100:250268
Silvester ER, Allen PG, Dharmawardana UR, Sutton M (2001) Structural studies of uranium and
thorium complexes with 4,5-dihydroxy-3,5-benzenedisulfonate (Tiron) at low and neutral pH
by X-ray absorption spectroscopy. Inorg Chem 40(12):28352841
Sokolova MN (1965) To mineralogy of deep horizons of the Kukisvumchorr apatite deposit in the
Khibiny Tundras. Dokl Akad Nauk SSSR 160(1):193203 (in Russian)
Zezin RB, Sokolova MN (1967) Macroscopic accumulations of carbonic substances in hydrothermal formations of the Khibiny massif. Dokl Akad Nauk SSSR 177(4):921924 (in Russian)
Introduction
The present work contains the results of studies of crystal chemistry and crystallization of calcium oxalates from human renal stones (whewellite and weddellite). These minerals are the most frequently occurring components of these
pathogenic stones. The whewellite-dominant stones usually occur as polynuclear
spherulite aggregates with characteristic radial microstructure (Fig. 1a). On the surface of whewellite stones, bipyramidic structures of weddellite have been observed
(Fig. 1b).
In order to develop methods revealing incipient states and making prophylaxis
of the stone diseases, it is necessary to study in details the crystalline substance of
biomineral aggregates and mechanisms of their formation. However, detailed investigations of crystal chemistry and, in particular, isomorphous substitutions in
urolithic minerals are almost absent. In addition, the mechanisms of the formation
of renal stones are presently unclear. Essential progress in studying of formation of
pathogenic biominerals in human organism may be achieved as a result of simulation experiments on crystallization of their analogues under laboratory conditions.
This may allow to establish inuence of organic and inorganic admixtures present
in a normal urine solution on formation of the renal stones.
The aim of this work is to reveal variations of chemical composition and crystal
structures of calcium oxalates of renal stones and study of the effects of components
of urine solution on a whewellite crystallization.
Alina R. Izatulina
Department of Crystallography, Faculty of Geology, St. Petersburg State University, University
Emb. 7/9, St. Petersburg, Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
Vladislav Yu. Yelnikov
Department of Crystallography, Faculty of Geology, St. Petersburg State University, University
Emb. 7/9, St. Petersburg, Russia
231
232
Fig. 1 Radial aggregate of whewellite (a) and bipyramidal crystals of weddellite (b)
Experimental
Thirty nine samples of calcium oxalates from renal stones were studied by X-ray
powder diffraction using DRON-2 powder diffractometer withCuK radiation, electron microprobe analysis (electron microscope ATB-55 with analytical attachment
LINK AN 10000/S85), and thermogravimetry (complex STA-449C, NETZSCH).
The detailed structural information has been obtained by single crystal X-ray
diffraction method (Table 1). Composition of solution for simulation experiments
was selected according to physiological conditions present in a human organism. We
studied inuence of amino acids, Mg ions and crystals of hydroxylapatite. Amino
acids are very important components of physiological solutions that can form a part
Whewellite
Crystal no.
Diffractometer
Radiation
Space group
a, A
b, A
c, A
,
3
V, A
, cm1
Re. measured
Unique re. with (F>4F )
RF
Rw
P21 /c
6.296(1)
14.598(2)
10.115(1)
109.50(1)
876.3(4)
12.95
3996
1169
0.036
0.050
Weddellite
2
1
Nicolet P3
MoK, =0.71069
P21 /c
I4/m
6.293(1)
12.364(2)
14.590(3) = a
10.125(2) 7.362(1)
109.46(2)
876(1)
1125.4(5)
10.60
8243
2828
3856
1319
0.030
0.033
0.039
I4/m
12.344(5)
=a
7.358(2)
1121(1)
2817
1314
0.036
0.040
233
234
c = 7.3487.360(2) A.
Results of X-ray microprobe and series of crystal structure renements of calcium oxalates from renal stones (Table 1) have shown that these variations are
not due to isomorphous substitutions in the Ca sites. This fact indicates that both
whewellite and weddellite can keep variable quantities of water in their structures. This suggestion is in agreement with the previous investigations of weddellite
(Tazzoli and Domeneghetti 1980; Naumov et al. 1996). Its structure contains zeolitic water with incomplete occupancy of crystallographic sites.
The crystal structure of whewellite consists from two types of alternating layers, parallel to (100) (Fig. 2). The calcium cations are at the center of a distorted
square antiprism. Each antiprism shares three edges with adjacent antiprisms and,
as a result, a layered hexagonal motif is formed. The second type of layers consists
of ribbons that are formed by alternating oxalic ions and water molecules bonded
by hydrogen bonds laying in the (010) plane and extending along the c axis.
H2 O molecules occupy two independent crystallographic sites, W(1) and W(2).
On difference Fourier maps, the positions of water molecules are disordered over
the W(1), W(11), W(2), W(21), and W(22) sites (Fig. 2). The sums of occupancies
of both splitting sites are close to one (Table 2).
Fig. 2 Crystal structure of whewellite in ball-and-stick (up) and polyhedral (below) representations
235
W(1) / W(11)
1
0.78 / 0.23
2
0.85 / 0.17
Literature data
0.85 / 0.15
(Tazzoli and
Domeneghetti 1980)
236
volume percent, %
25
20
15
10
5
0
0
10
20
diametr, MKM
30
40
237
It follows that aspartic and glutamic aminoacids inhibit growth of calcium oxalate
crystals, with the effect of the glutamic acid being much stronger.
The experiments with higher supersaturation showed that crystallization of calcium oxalate in a solution with glutamic acid with C = 102 mol/l concentration
will take place only if the initial concentration of calcium oxalate is increased up to
1.5 times. Once again, it demonstrates the strong concentration dependence of the
inhibit action of aminoacids.
The experiments on crystallization with impurities of alanine, proline and glycine
were carried out in order to study the inuence of aminoacid structure on a degree
of stagnation of calcium oxalate monohydrate crystal growth. The results are shown
in Table 3. It is clear that the inhibit degree on the crystal growth increases with the
increase of amino acid concentration and its structure.
It can be suggested that the inhibit action of amino acids is due to their adsorption on the active centers of a growing crystals surface. Amino acids that can be adsorbed on the surface of calcium oxalate monohydrate are inhibiting crystallization
of essentially calcium oxalate monohydrate. According to the results aminoacids
can be placed in the following row with increasing inhibition effect:
Glycine < Alanine < Proline < Aspartic acid < Glutamic acid
Experiments that we carried out to understand the role of magnesium ions during the calcium oxalate monohydrate crystallization displayed strong stagnation of
crystallization in the presence of Mg ions in the solution. Being added to the solution with supersaturation equal to = 7, Mg ions with the concentration = 103
mol/l reduced the size of calcium oxalate crystals up to 2.5 times, i.e. very strong
stagnation of the crystals growth has been observed. If concentration of Mg2+ ions
in the solution increases up to CMg = 102 mol/l (that corresponds to physiological
concentration) under supersaturation ( = 7), the crystallization of calcium oxalate
fully stops. Crystallization of calcium oxalate in the solution with the presence of
Mg2+ ions with the concentration C = 102 mol/l is observed only if the initial concentration of calcium oxalate is increased up to 3 times.
Studies of the inuence of an ionic force (I = 0.3) showed that with the supersaturation ( = 7), crystals of calcium oxalate can not be detected by the dispersion
method two hours after crystallization starts, i.e. the diameter of crystals was less
than 0.03 m. Moreover, the absence of crystallization of calcium oxalate monohydrate from the solution with ionic force I = 0.3 and = 7 during two months was
Table 3 Average size of the calcium oxalate crystals with the amino acid impurities
Aminoacid (mol/l)
105
102
Glutamic acid
Aspartic acid
Glycine
Alanine
Proline
Calcium oxalate without impurities
3.88 0.09 m
5.08 0.06 m
6.11 0.07 m
5.52 0.04 m
5.30 0.07 m
10.310.07 m
238
Conclusions
The main results of our studies can be summarized as follows:
1. Amino acids inhibit crystal growth of monohydrate calcium oxalate and reduce
average size of the crystals. The inhibition effect of amino acids depends upon
their molecular structure and increases with the extension of carboxyl groups and
concentration.
2. Mg ions can also inhibit crystallization by increasing the critical supersaturation
up to = 20 for the concentration of ions corresponding to that of a physiological
solution (urea).
3. The ionic force (I = 0.3) of the biological uid is a factor of stable supersaturated
solution of calcium oxalate.
4. The presence of crystals of hydroxylapatite in the solution induces the calcium
oxalate crystallization processes.
The results obtained indicate direction of a further research aimed at the detection
of a true role of proteins and hydroxylapatites in the formation of nephroliths and
potential development of a synthetic peptides for use in urolithiasis therapy.
Acknowledgements This work was supported by RFBR (## 06-05-65165, 05-05-64289). We
thank Prof. O.V. Frank-Kamenetskaya, Dr. O.A. Golovanova, and Prof. Yu.O. Punin for assistance
and advices during research.
239
References
Golovanova OA, Pyatanova PA, Rosseeva EV (2002) Denition methods of protein component
of kidney stones. Materials of the I Russian Meeting on Organic Mineralogy, St.-Petersburg
3637
Naumov DYu, Podberezskaya NV, Boldyreva EV (1996) Crystallochemical analysis of structures
of oxalic acid and its salts Mx (C2 O4 )y nH2 O (n=03). J Struct Chem 37(3):550577
Sokol EV, Nigmatulina EN, Maksimovna NV (2003) The spherulites of calcium oxalate in a kidney stones: morphology and formation conditions. Chemistry in Stable Evolution Interests
11:547558
Tazzoli V, Domeneghetti C (1980) The crystal structures of whewellite and weddellite: reexamination and comparison. Am Mineral 65:327334
Tiktinskiy OL, Aleksandrov VP (2000) Urolithiasis. Medicine, St.-Peterburg
Introduction
Nonstoichiometric carbonate-doped or carbonate apatites are the main mineral components of human and animal hard tissues (bones and teeth). They are increasingly
used as biocompatible materials for medical purposes. Besides, dispersed systems
based on apatite-like compounds are characterized by highly developed surface
(400 m2 /g) and used as high effective ion-exchanger matrixes.
The basic structure of apatite Ca5 (PO4 )3 (OH, F, Cl) had been determined in 1930
(Mehmel 1930). It can be described (Fig. 1) as the three-dimensional network of
PO4 -tetrahedra, which are linked together by columns of nine-fold coordinated Ca1
atoms (Fig. 2a). The channels passing through the network have the axes coinciding
with the six-fold screw axes and contain the triangles of seven-fold coordinated Ca2
atoms (Fig. 2b) and OH , F or Cl ions.
The location of CO3 2 ions in apatite structure is an important question because
it usually increases the reactivity of apatites, for example, in the processing of dissolution of dental enamel in caries. It is now generally accepted that the principal
possibly sites for CO3 2 ions are on the hexad axis replacing OH ion in channel
(A-type) or replacing a PO4 3 ion (B-type). These substitution types are resulting
in characteristic infrared (IR) signatures. In biological apatites the predominant substitution appears to be CO3 triangles for PO4 tetrahedral, but frequently a small
amount of OH ion replacement also occurs.
A-type carbonate substitution results in progressive increase in a and decrease in
c parameters (LeGeros et al. 1969; Bonel 1972) whereas substitution of phosphate
by B-type carbonate results in progressive decrease in a and increase in c (Nelson
and Featherstone 1982; Vignoles et al. 1988). However, many of B-type apatites
have somewhat increased lattice constants a due to entering of water molecules.
Olga V. Frank-Kamenetskaya
Department of Crystallography, Faculty of Geology, St. Petersburg State University, University
Emb. 7/9, St. Petersburg, Russia, e-mail: [email protected]
241
242
O.V. Frank-Kamenetskaya
Fig. 2 Types of calcium polyhedra in the structure of apatite: columns of nine-fold coordinated
Ca1 polyhedra (a) and triangles of seven-fold coordinated Ca2 polyhedra (b)
243
Experimental
The study of crystal chemistry of biological and synthetic carbonate apatites has
been carried out by powder (including high-temperature measurements) and singlecrystal X-ray diffraction methods, IR-spectroscopy, thermal analysis and various
chemical analytical techniques.
Biological samples used in this study were physiogenic and pathogenic carbonate apatites formed in a human organism (in teeth, bone hard tissues and in renal,
salivary and dental stones) and apatites from fossils of different taxonomic families
(brachiopods, conodonts, shes, reptiles, mammal) with different geological ages
and burial conditions.
Synthesis of apatites was realized by precipitation methods and under hydrothermal conditions (from ux and by calcite treatment).
Fig. 3 PO4 tetrahedron with CO3 -triangles crossing it (a) and located on its vertical faces(b). CO
and OO distances (in angstroms) are indicated
244
O.V. Frank-Kamenetskaya
from the O2p atoms. There are six symand the O2c atoms are shifted by 0.75 A
metrically equivalent CO3 groups in the unit cell, all with the triangle plane parallel
to the z-axis. In four of them, one of the symmetrically equivalent coordinate axes (x
or y) lies in the triangle plane, whereas the other makes 60 deg with it. The planes of
the other two triangles make 60 deg with both x- and y-axes. Such orientation of the
triangles should induce signicant reduction of the a lattice constant in comparison
to hydroxyapatite (OH-AP).
In crystal structure of NH4 -doped hydrohyapatite with 4.4 wt% of CO2 and
Rp = 4.85, Rwp = 5.23, Rexp =
1.4 wt% of water (a = 9.437(1), c = 6.888(1)A;
5.05%), the O3 position is splitting. The nal unit cell content is [Ca9.30 (NH4 )0.10
0.60 ][(PO4 )4.95 (CO3 )1.05 ][(OH)1.65 (H2 O)0.35 ](H2 O)0.30 . Carbonate ions randomly
occupy adjacent faces of the PO4 tetrahedra, which are parallel to the c-axis
(Fig. 3b). Consequently, there are two positions, C1 and C2, of carbon atoms with
the equal occupations of about 0.1. They are located at the equal distance of 0.6 A
from the position of the P atom. Each of them has in their coordination one of two
oxygen atoms (O1 or O2) which retains their positions in the structure. Two other
coordinating oxygen atoms O3c are common for both carbon atoms. The O3c atoms
from the O3p atoms belonging to the PO4 tetrahedron.
are shifted by 0.37 A
2+ is limited because of the rather
The isomorphic substitution (K+ , NH+
4 ) Ca
different ionic radii of these ions and, therefore, in both structures under considerations, there is a charge disbalance associated with the replacement of the [PO4 ]3
2
groups by CO2
3 and HPO4 . This disbalance is compensated by the vacancies in
the cation sites through the scheme:
0.5Ca2+ + (PO4 )3 = 0.5Ca + A2 , A2 = CO3 2 , HPO4 2 , Ca - vacancies.
In NH4 -doped apatite charge disbalance is associated also with the replacement of
the part of OH anions by vacancies and water molecules:
0.5Ca2+ + OH = 0.5Ca + (OH, H2 O), OH vacancies.
This mechanism is usual for carbonated apatites and results in the dominance of
vacancies in the calcium sites. The vacancies in the channel sites in the structure
of K+ -doped apatite are absent. The data of IR-spectroscopy, thermal analysis and
changes of lattice constant a at elevated temperatures (Fig. 4) demonstrate also the
absence of water in the structure of this apatite. Therefore, in the K+ -doped structure
the positive extra charge is completely compensated through the scheme 0.5Ca2+ +
(PO4 )3 = 0.5Ca + A2 .
The Rietveld renement (synchrotron radiation, high-resolution diffractometer,
Siberian Synchrotron Center) of the crystal structures of human tooth enamel apatite
with 2.9 wt% of CO2 and 0.22 wt% of F (sp gr. P63 /m, a = 9.4486(2), c = 6.8875(3)
Rp = 0.047, Rwp = 0.062, RBragg = 0.025) allowed to propose average strucA;
tural model of the human tooth enamel apatite of the elder age group (Ivanova
et al. 2005). The sample was prepared from the enamels of ve molars of consent Saint Petersburg 5060 years inhabitants. The occupancy of phosphorous site
is lower than it could be expected with C replacing P without vacancies in this
site. Therefore, the shift of carbon atom from phosphorous site is quite believable.
The geometry of a tetrahedron is closer to that in the structure of stoichiometric
245
246
O.V. Frank-Kamenetskaya
dental stones) belong to the A B type (B > A). Renal stone apatites may be both
AB and B types.
According to the variations in the unit-cell parameters, isomorphic replacements
in crystal structures of the apatites of pathogenic origin (in renal, salivary and dental
stones) are more intensive in comparison with physiogenic dental enamel apatites
(Fig. 5). Among the pathogenic apatites, the most considerable compositional variations are observed for the renal stone apatites that indicates strong variability of
conditions of their formation. The changes in the unit-cell parameters of bone apatites are not completely interpretable, because these apatites consist of nanosized
crystals that are smaller than those of other biological apatites.
The age variations of the crystal lattice parameters of human enamel apatites
(Table 1) are related to the complicate processes of de- and remineralization, which
result in the increase or reduction of vacancies in the Ca positions and in the respec2 content in the unit cell:
tive changes of CO2
3 , H2 O and [HPO4 ]
(n + m/2)Ca2+ + n(PO4 )3 + mOH = (n + m/2)Ca + nA2 + m(OH, H2 O)
where A2 =[CO3 ]2 or [HPO4 ]2 -; Ca , OH vacancies (Frank-Kamenetskaya
et al. 2004).
Till 50 years age, values of the a and c parameters of enamel apatites change
considerably without any dependence on concrete age that may be explained by the
essential uctuations of the Ca content in human organisms. After 50 years age,
the signicant direct correlation between the ange and the a parameter has been
revealed (Fig. 6).
Relationships between the chemical composition and human age (Table 2, Fig. 7)
point out to the fact that, at the age of 50, remineralization processes are damping.
Changes in the unit-cell parameters of biological apatites connect mainly with the
age demineralization resulting primarily in the increase of Ca-site vacancies, and
6.915
6.905
6.895
c,
6.885
6.875
6.865
6.855
6.845
9.350
9.370
9.390
9.410
9.430
9.450
9.470
a,
OH-AP (PDF 09-432)
Dental enamels
Salivary stones
Urinary stones
Fig. 5 Unit cell parameters of apatites forming in human organisms. See text for details
247
Table 1 Unit cell constants of dental enamel apatites of the of St. Petersburg residents of different
ages and sex
Age, years
Sex
a, A
c, A
510
1130
Male
Male
Female
Male
Female
Male
Female
9.4469.447
9.4469.453
9.4429.451
9.4439.453
9.4419.450
9.4439.453
9.4419.449
6.8866.891
6.8786.886
6.8786.887
6.8796.887
6.8806.890
6.8806.888
6.8796.888
3150
5165
9.455
R = 0.69
(P = 0.99)
9.450
a,
9.445
9.440
1.374
R = 0.82
(P = 0.999)
a/c
1.373
1.372
1.371
52
54
56
58
60
Age, years
62
64
248
O.V. Frank-Kamenetskaya
Table 2 Pair correlation coefcients (R) between the human age and the chemical composition of
the enamel apatite
Parameter
Age, years
Ca/P
Ca+Na+Mg/P
F, mass%
CO2 , mass%
1558
1558
1248
3058
9
9
10
9
0.68
0.77
0.63
0.86
0.95
0.99
0.95
0.999
Fig. 7 Examples of IR spectrums of human different age enamel apatite in region 1900 3700,
cm1
249
Apatite dissolution
Carbonation
Fluorine increasing
Ferrugination
Silicication
Dental dentin
Tusk dentin
400
4.5
600800
600800
4.5
1420
4.5
400
600800
1420
2040
2040
2040
2040
2040
over inuence of the burial conditions and hard tissue structure on the destruction
processes (Table 3).
Apatites of skeletal reliquiae representing invertebrates and chordata (brachiopods, conodonts, shes, reptiles) from Cretaceous, Jurassic Carbon, Devonian and
Ordovician formation (geological age more than 60 million years) are carbonate
uoroapatites of the AB (B > A) and B types (see, e.g., Panova et al. 2001).
Among these minerals, for the rst time a single crystal of biological apatite
the element of conodontous of the Ozarkodinida class (from Devon formation
nearby Ilmen Lake) has been found (sp.gr. P63 /m, a = 9.374(2), c = 6.882(2) A).
The renement of the conodontous apatite structure (single-crystal X-ray diffraction, MoK X-radiation, R = 0.017, Rw = 0.022) conrmed its close relationships to the stoichiometric uoroapatite structure. Bond lengths in the PO4 tetra The positions of all
hedra are: PO1 PO3 = 1.535(2) < PO2 = 1.543(2) A.
tetrahedral oxygen sites are partly vacant (the quota of vacancies = 0.030.01 at.
un.). Large values of the anisotropic displacement parameters indicate the possible splitting of the tetrahedral O sites: O2 along the Z-axis and O3 along the
X-axis.
250
O.V. Frank-Kamenetskaya
the incorporation of water into the structure of these apatites and their biogenic
analogues occurs simultaneously with the advent of vacancies in calcium position
and carbonate ion replacements of PO4 -groups according to scheme:
(n + m + r/2)Ca2+ + (n + m)(PO4 )3 + rOH
= (n + m + r/2)Ca + nCO2
3
+m[HPO4 ]2 + r(OH , H2 O), r + m > n.
Na-containing carbonate uorineapatites with the excess of F (more than 2 apfu)
obtained under the wide interval of conditions are the analogues of apatites from the
skeletal reliquiae with high fossilization degree as well as of the apatites from the
bedded and nodular phosphorites. The a parameter of such apatites is equal or less
than the a parameter of uoroapatite. Inverse correlation between the a parameter
and the carbonate amount results from the replacement:
Ca2+ + [PO4 ]3 = Na+ + [CO3 ]2 .
Conclusion
Crystal chemistry of carbonate apatites is important for the development of the conception of biomineralization and for the creation of scientic bases for the new
biocompatible materials for medical purposes.
Small crystallite sizes (about tens to hundreds of Angstroms) and great complexity of substitutions have made denitive determinations of the crystal structure
and chemistry of carbonate apatite quite difcult. For this reason, there are many
unanswered questions concerning replacements in the crystal structures of carbonate apatite.
Undoubtedly, the crystal structures of carbonate apatite are highly disordered.
Recent success in the synthesis of single crystal of the A-B apatite at high pressure
and in the location of carbonate ion in the c-axis channel of apatite structure (Fleet
and Liu 2004, 2005; Fleet et al. 2004), and the essential progress of diffraction and
microscopy methods opens up new perspectives in crystal chemistry of carbonate
apatites, rst of all, of biological origin.
Acknowledgements The work was supported by RFBR projects (98-05-65578, 03-05-65278,
06-05-65165). The authors are grateful to the late Prof. N.V. Kotov, Prof. A.B. Koltsov,
Dr. T.I. Ivanova, Dr. M.A. Kusmina, Dr. M.L. Zorina, Dr. L.G. Poritskaya, Mrs. T.N. Kaminskaya,
Dr. O.A. Golovanova, Dr. Yu.V. Plotkina, Dr. O.L. Pichur, Dr. A.V. Volkov, Mrs E.V. Rosseeva,
Mr. V. Sapega, Mr. V.V Golubtsov, Mr. N.Yu. Vernigora, Mrs. D.A. Kotlyarova (St. Petersburg
State University) and Dr. A.N. Shmakov (Siberian Synchrotron Center, Novosibisk) for active collaboration in this work.
251
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pressure. Biomaterials 26:75487554
Fleet ME, Liu X, King PL (2004) Accomadation of the carbonate ion in apatite: An FTIR and
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Index
253
254
gehlenite, 19
georgechaoite, 54
gittinsite, 46
haineaultite, 58, 68
halloysite, 183
hejtmanite, 160
heterophyllosilicates, 157, 221
heulandite, 3
high level nuclear waste, vitrication, 117
hilairite group, 12, 49
human renal stones, 231
hydration energy, 2
hydrocalumite, 124
hydrokeldyshite, 72
hydrolysis, 72, 129, 252
hydrotalcite, 123
hydroxylapatite, 58, 232, 251
icosahedral viruses, 165
imandrite, 79
imogolite, 184
inheritance in mineral genesis, 73
innelite, 162
ionic conductor, 133
kapustinite, 56, 79
karchevskyite, 125
karnasurtite-(Ce), 221
kazakovite, 72, 79
keldyshite, 45, 72
khibinskite, 45
kimzeyite, 46
koashvite, 79
komarovite, 11, 144
kombatite, 130
komkovite, 47, 48
kostylevite, 75
labuntsovite group, 12, 100
lamprophyllite, 63, 162, 221
lanarkite, 131
layered double hydroxides (LDH), 123126
lemoynite, 55
lipscombite, 102
liquid and gas inclusions, 14
lisitsynite, 117
litvinskite, 51, 79
Loewensteins rule, 18
lomonosovite, 72, 143, 159, 221
lomonosovite family, 73
loudounite, 47
lovozerite, 12, 51, 72, 79
lovozerite group, 12, 50, 79
Index
luminescent materials, 139
magnetic susceptibility, 167
magnetocrystalline anisotropy, 129
manaksite, 153
melilite, 19
mendipite, 130
metamict minerals, annealing, 204205
mica, 162, 166, 182
miserite, 156
mist rolling, 187
mixed anionic radicals, 75, 102
monazite, 194, 209, 224
motukoreaite, 124
murmanite, 58, 72, 143, 159, 221
nabalamprophyllite, 160
nadorite, 130
nafertisite, 159, 228
nanocondenser, 133
nanolayers, 157
nanoparticles, 165, 179
nanotechnology, 183
nanotubes, 165, 179
natrolemoynite, 47
negative linear thermal expansion, 112
nonlinear-optics, 114
order-disorder theory, 39
orthoericssonite, 162
parakeldyshite, 13, 45, 72
paranatrolite, 12
paraumbite, 12, 55, 221
parkinsonite, 130
penkvilksite, 53, 74
peralkaline state of natural
substance, 72
perite, 130
perovskite group, 12
perraultite, 163
petarasite, 51
pharmacosiderite structure type, 106108
pharmacosiderite-type titanosilicates, 27
phillipsite, 1
philolithite, 132
phosphoinnelite, 160
pillared layered structures, 125
pillaring, 157
plombierite, 37
plumbomicrolite, 11
polyphite, 161
polysomatic series, 72, 158
polytypes, 124, 182
Index
pyatenkoite-(Y), 48
pyrochlore group, 12
quadruphite, 160
quintinite-3T, 128
radiation damage, 50, 206, 209
rhabdophane, 58, 224
rigidunitmode, 23
riversideite, 37
sahlinite, 130
sazykinaite-(Y), 28, 48
second harmonic generation, 114
selective cation-exchanger, 3435, 123
seidite-(Ce), 75, 224
seidozerite, 162
self-irradiation, 209
shape-selective catalysts, 185
shomiokite-(Y), 224
shungite, 165
sitinakite, 12
sobolevite, 163
sodalite, 8, 20, 28, 143
sorbents, 74, 226
steacyite, 221
steenstrupine-(Ce), 222
stereochemically active lone
electron pair, 131
superstructure, 66, 80, 97, 124
surkhobite, 163
terskite, 55, 75, 87
255
thorikosite, 130
thorite, 221
tisinalite, 72, 79
tobermorite group, 37
tochilinite, 186
transformation mineral species, 73
tubular ribbons silicate radicals, 153
tumchaite, 52
umbite, 54, 75, 221
uranmicrolite, 11
urolithiasis therapy, 238
Vegards rule, 21, 136
vinogradovite, 12, 28
vlasovite, 50
vuonnemite, 72, 143, 159
vuoriyarvite, 11
wadeite, 29, 53, 61, 145
weddellite, 231
wermlandite, 124
whewellite, 63, 231
yoshimuraite, 162
zeolites, 1, 7, 17, 35, 37, 63, 76, 117, 221
zeravshanite, 56
zircon, 45, 209
zirconium silicates, 4553
zirsinalite, 13, 55, 72, 79
zorite, 12, 57, 65, 75, 150