Description and unique crystal-structure of waterhouseite, a new hydroxy manganese phosphate species from the Iron Monarch deposit, Middleback Ranges, South Australia
- Autor(en)
- Allan Pring, Uwe Kolitsch, William D. Birch
- Abstrakt
Waterhouseite from the Iron Monarch
mine, Iron Knob, South Australia, is a new hydroxy manganese phosphate
species that has a unique crystal-structure. The mineral was found in a
carbonate-rich zone with gatehouseite, seamanite, rhodochrosite,
shigaite, barite, hausmannite and hematite. It occurs as divergent
sprays of orange-brown to dark brown bladed crystals up to 1 mm in
length but only up to 20 μm in thickness. The crystals are transparent
with a pearly luster on cleavages, but it is vitreous to pearly on the
tabular faces. The mineral is brittle, with a conchoidal fracture and a
yellowish brown streak. There is a perfect cleavage on (100) and a
probable cleavage on (001). The crystals show the principal forms {100}
(dominant), {010}, {011} and {001}. All crystals are twinned on (100) by
non-merohedry. The Mohs hardness is estimated to be ∼4, and the
measured density is 3.55(5) g/cm3 (calculated density is 3.591 g/cm3).
Crystals are biaxial negative and length-slow, with α 1.730(3), β
∼1.738 and γ 1.738(4), but 2V could not be measured. Interference colors
are normal, implying the absence of optical dispersion. The optical
orientation is XYZ = bac (pseudo-orthorhombic), and the pleochroism is X
pale brownish, Y brown-yellow, Z pale brownish, with absorption Z = X
> Y. Electron-microprobe analyses yielded the empirical formula Mn7.29[(P1.81As0.07 V0.04)∑1.92O7.68](OH,O) 8.32, calculated on the basis of 16 O atoms. The simplified formula is Mn7(PO4)2(OH)8,
in agreement with the crystal-structure determination. The strongest
five lines in the powder X-ray-diffraction pattern [d in Å(I)(hkl)] are:
4.436(70)(111), 3.621(100)(202), 3.069 (50)(311), 2.941(40)(013), and
2.780(35)(020). Unit-cell parameters refined from powder-diffraction
data, a 11.364(6), b 5.570(2), c 10.455(3) Å, β 96.61(3)°, V 657.4(2) Å 3
(Z = 2), agree very well with those refined from the single-crystal
data. The crystal structure was solved by direct methods and refined in
space group P21/c to R1(F) = 5.15% and wR2all(F2) = 16.28% using data from a twinned crystal (by non-merohedry) with 1400 "observed" reflections with Fo. > 4o-(Fo). The crystal structure is characterized by a dense, complex framework of Mn(O,OH)6 octahedra and PO4
tetrahedra, which are linked by both edges and comers. Two different
subunits can be recognized in the structure: arsenoclasite-type strips
of edge-sharing octahedra (fragments of brucite-pyrochroite-type sheets
of octahedra) and finite chains of edge-sharing octahedra (fragments of
infinite rutile-type chains). The PO4 tetrahedra provide a
connection between the strips and the chains. Single-crystal Raman
spectra confirm weak hydrogen bonding. A unique feature of the structure
is that the single PO4 tetrahedron shares two of its edges with Mn(O,OH)6
octahedra. Only two synthetic anhydrous metal arsenates are known that
show a corresponding sharing of two edges. The structure of
waterhouseite has no equivalent, although the unit-cell parameters
reveal some relations with the two chemical analogues allactite, Mn7(AsO4)2(OH)8, and raadeite, M97(PO4)2 (OH)8.
- Organisation(en)
- Institut für Mineralogie und Kristallographie
- Externe Organisation(en)
- Flinders University, Museums Victoria
- Journal
- The Canadian Mineralogist
- Band
- 43
- Seiten
- 1401-1410
- Anzahl der Seiten
- 10
- ISSN
- 0008-4476
- Publikationsdatum
- 2005
- Peer-reviewed
- Ja
- ÖFOS 2012
- 1051 Geologie, Mineralogie
- Link zum Portal
- https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/de/publications/f2778b94-9703-467d-8215-aaea2042ba4f