Standard

Crystal structure of isolueshite and its synthetic compositional analogue. / Krivovichev, Sergey V.; Chakhmouradian, Anton R.; Mitchell, Roger H.; Filatov, Stanislav K.; Chukanov, Nikita V.

In: European Journal of Mineralogy, Vol. 12, No. 3, 01.01.2000, p. 597-607.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Krivovichev, SV, Chakhmouradian, AR, Mitchell, RH, Filatov, SK & Chukanov, NV 2000, 'Crystal structure of isolueshite and its synthetic compositional analogue', European Journal of Mineralogy, vol. 12, no. 3, pp. 597-607. https://doi.org/10.1127/ejm/12/3/0597

APA

Krivovichev, S. V., Chakhmouradian, A. R., Mitchell, R. H., Filatov, S. K., & Chukanov, N. V. (2000). Crystal structure of isolueshite and its synthetic compositional analogue. European Journal of Mineralogy, 12(3), 597-607. https://doi.org/10.1127/ejm/12/3/0597

Vancouver

Krivovichev SV, Chakhmouradian AR, Mitchell RH, Filatov SK, Chukanov NV. Crystal structure of isolueshite and its synthetic compositional analogue. European Journal of Mineralogy. 2000 Jan 1;12(3):597-607. https://doi.org/10.1127/ejm/12/3/0597

Author

Krivovichev, Sergey V. ; Chakhmouradian, Anton R. ; Mitchell, Roger H. ; Filatov, Stanislav K. ; Chukanov, Nikita V. / Crystal structure of isolueshite and its synthetic compositional analogue. In: European Journal of Mineralogy. 2000 ; Vol. 12, No. 3. pp. 597-607.

BibTeX

@article{f7c6455ee4284e9f94ad44188fa8373a,
title = "Crystal structure of isolueshite and its synthetic compositional analogue",
abstract = "The crystal structure of isolueshite, a recently described member of the perovskite group from the Khibina complex (Russia), was refined by single-crystal methods in the space group Pm3m [a = 3.909(1) {\AA}] to R = 0.031 and wR = 0.061. The previously proposed cubic symmetry of isolueshite was confirmed. In contrast to the known perovskite-group minerals crystallizing with the cubic symmetry, isolueshite shows a disordered arrangement of oxygen atoms in a Pm3m-type cell. In isolueshite, the oxygen atoms are disordered from their 'ideal' site at 3c ( 1/2 , 0, 1/2 ) over four 12h sites (x, 0, 1/2 ) with refined x of 0.579(5). The refinement was based on the structural formula (Na0.75La0.19Ca0.06)(Σ1.00)(Nb0.50Ti0.50)(Σ1.00)O3.00 closely corresponding to the empirical formula of the mineral. The presence of hydroxyl groups in the structure of isolueshite was confirmed by infrared spectroscopy (absorption lines at 3450 cm-1 and 1080 cm-1). Structural formulae of the mineral accounting for the presence of (OH)1- groups are given. A synthetic compound of the composition (Na0.75La0.25) (Nb0.50Ti0.50)O3 was prepared using the ceramic technique (final heating at 1200°C), and shown not to crystallize with cubic symmetry. The crystal structure of this compound is best refined (Rietveld method) in orthorhombic symmetry [Cmcm, a = 7.7841(9), b = 7.8045(2), c = 7.7831(9) {\AA}]. This structure is derived from the ideal perovskite lattice (Pm3m) by rotation of the (Nb,Ti)O6 octahedra about two tetrad axes of the cubic subcell (tilt system a0b+c-). Our data and, in particular, the presence of oxygen disorder (incongruent octahedral tilting) in the structure of isolueshite, suggest that stabilization of the cubic symmetry of this mineral may be controlled by thermodynamic or kinetic factors (crystallization temperature, pressure or cooling rate), rather than by the isomorphic substitutions involving La and Ti. Hence, isolueshite should probably be considered a quenched or 'frozen' polymorph of NaNbO3.",
keywords = "Infrared spectroscopy, Isolueshite, Khibina complex, Perovskite group, Russia, Structure",
author = "Krivovichev, {Sergey V.} and Chakhmouradian, {Anton R.} and Mitchell, {Roger H.} and Filatov, {Stanislav K.} and Chukanov, {Nikita V.}",
year = "2000",
month = jan,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1127/ejm/12/3/0597",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
pages = "597--607",
journal = "European Journal of Mineralogy",
issn = "0935-1221",
publisher = "SCHWEIZERBART Science Publishers",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Crystal structure of isolueshite and its synthetic compositional analogue

AU - Krivovichev, Sergey V.

AU - Chakhmouradian, Anton R.

AU - Mitchell, Roger H.

AU - Filatov, Stanislav K.

AU - Chukanov, Nikita V.

PY - 2000/1/1

Y1 - 2000/1/1

N2 - The crystal structure of isolueshite, a recently described member of the perovskite group from the Khibina complex (Russia), was refined by single-crystal methods in the space group Pm3m [a = 3.909(1) Å] to R = 0.031 and wR = 0.061. The previously proposed cubic symmetry of isolueshite was confirmed. In contrast to the known perovskite-group minerals crystallizing with the cubic symmetry, isolueshite shows a disordered arrangement of oxygen atoms in a Pm3m-type cell. In isolueshite, the oxygen atoms are disordered from their 'ideal' site at 3c ( 1/2 , 0, 1/2 ) over four 12h sites (x, 0, 1/2 ) with refined x of 0.579(5). The refinement was based on the structural formula (Na0.75La0.19Ca0.06)(Σ1.00)(Nb0.50Ti0.50)(Σ1.00)O3.00 closely corresponding to the empirical formula of the mineral. The presence of hydroxyl groups in the structure of isolueshite was confirmed by infrared spectroscopy (absorption lines at 3450 cm-1 and 1080 cm-1). Structural formulae of the mineral accounting for the presence of (OH)1- groups are given. A synthetic compound of the composition (Na0.75La0.25) (Nb0.50Ti0.50)O3 was prepared using the ceramic technique (final heating at 1200°C), and shown not to crystallize with cubic symmetry. The crystal structure of this compound is best refined (Rietveld method) in orthorhombic symmetry [Cmcm, a = 7.7841(9), b = 7.8045(2), c = 7.7831(9) Å]. This structure is derived from the ideal perovskite lattice (Pm3m) by rotation of the (Nb,Ti)O6 octahedra about two tetrad axes of the cubic subcell (tilt system a0b+c-). Our data and, in particular, the presence of oxygen disorder (incongruent octahedral tilting) in the structure of isolueshite, suggest that stabilization of the cubic symmetry of this mineral may be controlled by thermodynamic or kinetic factors (crystallization temperature, pressure or cooling rate), rather than by the isomorphic substitutions involving La and Ti. Hence, isolueshite should probably be considered a quenched or 'frozen' polymorph of NaNbO3.

AB - The crystal structure of isolueshite, a recently described member of the perovskite group from the Khibina complex (Russia), was refined by single-crystal methods in the space group Pm3m [a = 3.909(1) Å] to R = 0.031 and wR = 0.061. The previously proposed cubic symmetry of isolueshite was confirmed. In contrast to the known perovskite-group minerals crystallizing with the cubic symmetry, isolueshite shows a disordered arrangement of oxygen atoms in a Pm3m-type cell. In isolueshite, the oxygen atoms are disordered from their 'ideal' site at 3c ( 1/2 , 0, 1/2 ) over four 12h sites (x, 0, 1/2 ) with refined x of 0.579(5). The refinement was based on the structural formula (Na0.75La0.19Ca0.06)(Σ1.00)(Nb0.50Ti0.50)(Σ1.00)O3.00 closely corresponding to the empirical formula of the mineral. The presence of hydroxyl groups in the structure of isolueshite was confirmed by infrared spectroscopy (absorption lines at 3450 cm-1 and 1080 cm-1). Structural formulae of the mineral accounting for the presence of (OH)1- groups are given. A synthetic compound of the composition (Na0.75La0.25) (Nb0.50Ti0.50)O3 was prepared using the ceramic technique (final heating at 1200°C), and shown not to crystallize with cubic symmetry. The crystal structure of this compound is best refined (Rietveld method) in orthorhombic symmetry [Cmcm, a = 7.7841(9), b = 7.8045(2), c = 7.7831(9) Å]. This structure is derived from the ideal perovskite lattice (Pm3m) by rotation of the (Nb,Ti)O6 octahedra about two tetrad axes of the cubic subcell (tilt system a0b+c-). Our data and, in particular, the presence of oxygen disorder (incongruent octahedral tilting) in the structure of isolueshite, suggest that stabilization of the cubic symmetry of this mineral may be controlled by thermodynamic or kinetic factors (crystallization temperature, pressure or cooling rate), rather than by the isomorphic substitutions involving La and Ti. Hence, isolueshite should probably be considered a quenched or 'frozen' polymorph of NaNbO3.

KW - Infrared spectroscopy

KW - Isolueshite

KW - Khibina complex

KW - Perovskite group

KW - Russia

KW - Structure

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0034129296&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1127/ejm/12/3/0597

DO - 10.1127/ejm/12/3/0597

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:0034129296

VL - 12

SP - 597

EP - 607

JO - European Journal of Mineralogy

JF - European Journal of Mineralogy

SN - 0935-1221

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 53953923