Crystal chemistry of cation-exchanged forms of epistolite-group minerals

Author(s)
Inna S. Lykova, Igor V Pekov, Natalia V Zubkova, Vasiliy O. Yapaskurt, Nadezhda A. Chervonnaya, A.A. Zolotarev, Gerald Giester
Abstract

The crystal structure of vigrishinite, an epistolite-group heterophyllosilicate with essential Zn, has been reinvestigated; the ideal end-member formula is revised to Zn2Ti4-x (Si2O7)2O2(OH,F,O)2(H2O,OH,〈)4 with x<1. Structure models of Zn-exchanged forms of murmanite after 5 and 24 hour experiments with 1N ZnSO4 solution at 90 °C have been obtained from single-crystal X-ray diffraction data. The structural formulae are [B1]Ca0.04{Na1.22(Ti1.19Mn0.60Nb0.21)}{[A1,A2]Zn1.03(Ti1.64Nb0.36)[Si2O7]2}O2(O,OH)2(H2O)4 for vigrishinite and {Na1.14(Ti1.45Mn0.50Nb0.05)}{[A1]Ca0.77 [A2]Zn0.13(Ti1.85Nb0.15)[Si2O7]2}O2(OH,O)2(H2O)4 and [B1]Zn0.15 [B2]Ca0.18{Na1.06(Ti1.32Mn0.60Nb0.08)}{[A1]Zn0.70 [A2]Ca0.12(Ti1.74Nb0.26)[Si2O7]2}O2(OH,O)2(H2O)4 for the 5 and 24 hour Zn-exchanged forms of murmanite, respectively (braces give successively the contents of the octahedral O and heteropolyhedral H sheets). The triclinic (P-1) unit-cell parameters are respectively: a = 8.7127(17), 8.871(3), 8.748(2) Å; b = 8.6823(17), 8.844(6), 8.724(2) Å; c = 11.746(2), 11.734(6), 11.675(3) Å; α = 91.481(4), 92.75(3), 92.503(13)°; β = 98.471(4), 97.60(4), 97.846(13)°; γ = 105.474(4), 106.23(2), 105.875(13)°; V = 845.0(3), 872.7(8), 845.9(4) Å3. Our data (1) confirm that vigrishinite was formed as a result of natural ion-exchange of murmanite Na4Ti4 (Si2O7)2O4 · 4H2O with Zn2+ in low-temperature solutions; (2) prove that direct transformation of lomonosovite Na4Ti4(Si2O7)2O4 · 2Na3PO4 into vigrishinite, without prior leaching of Na+ and PO4 3- from the former and formation of murmanite, is unlikely; (3) suggest the following ion-exchange mechanism: during the early stage Na+ leaches into the solution whereas Ca2+, a common admixture in murmanite, migrates into one of the sites in the H sheet, leaving another site vacant for further entry of Zn; in the next stage Zn2+ enters the emptied site in the H sheet and, in small amount, into the interlayer whereas Ca2+ partly moves from the H sheet into the interlayer; (4) show the transformation of the murmanite-type unit cell (P1; V ≈ 440 Å3) into the vigrishinite-type cell with a and b parameters corresponding to the ab face diagonals of the former during the first stage of the exchange with Zn, due to ordering in the H sheet. New findings of vigrishinite in two pegmatites of the Lovozero massif, Kola peninsula, Russia (at Severnyi open pit, Mt. Alluaiv and at Pegmatite #60, Mt. Karnasurt) in the same setting as at the type locality, i.e. only in close contact with cavities after dissolved sphalerite, show that the ion exchange in epistolite-group heterophyllosilicates is not uncommon in Nature. Our data indicate there is a continuous solid solution between murmanite and vigrishinite.

Organisation(s)
Department of Mineralogy and Crystallography
External organisation(s)
Anuchin Research Institute and Museum of Anthropology, Russian Academy of Sciences, Saint Petersburg State University
Journal
European Journal of Mineralogy: an international journal of mineralogy, geochemistry and related sciences
Volume
27
Pages
669-682
No. of pages
14
ISSN
0935-1221
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1127/ejm/2015/0027-2469
Publication date
06-2015
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
105116 Mineralogy, 105113 Crystallography
Keywords
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Geochemistry and Petrology
Portal url
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/en/publications/crystal-chemistry-of-cationexchanged-forms-of-epistolitegroup-minerals(8a7bb280-9399-4cac-bda1-b69609e35976).html