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Ermakovite (NH4)(As2O3)2Br, a new exhalative arsenite bromide mineral from the Fan-Yagnob coal deposit, Tajikistan. / Карпенко, Владимир; Паутов, Л.А.; Сийдра, Олег Иоханнесович; Мираков, Мирак; Зайцев, Анатолий Николаевич; Плечов, Павел; Махмадшариф, С.

In: Mineralogical Magazine, Vol. 87, No. 1, 05.02.2023, p. 69-78.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Карпенко, В, Паутов, ЛА, Сийдра, ОИ, Мираков, М, Зайцев, АН, Плечов, П & Махмадшариф, С 2023, 'Ermakovite (NH4)(As2O3)2Br, a new exhalative arsenite bromide mineral from the Fan-Yagnob coal deposit, Tajikistan', Mineralogical Magazine, vol. 87, no. 1, pp. 69-78. https://doi.org/10.1180/mgm.2022.116

APA

Карпенко, В., Паутов, Л. А., Сийдра, О. И., Мираков, М., Зайцев, А. Н., Плечов, П., & Махмадшариф, С. (2023). Ermakovite (NH4)(As2O3)2Br, a new exhalative arsenite bromide mineral from the Fan-Yagnob coal deposit, Tajikistan. Mineralogical Magazine, 87(1), 69-78. https://doi.org/10.1180/mgm.2022.116

Vancouver

Карпенко В, Паутов ЛА, Сийдра ОИ, Мираков М, Зайцев АН, Плечов П et al. Ermakovite (NH4)(As2O3)2Br, a new exhalative arsenite bromide mineral from the Fan-Yagnob coal deposit, Tajikistan. Mineralogical Magazine. 2023 Feb 5;87(1):69-78. https://doi.org/10.1180/mgm.2022.116

Author

Карпенко, Владимир ; Паутов, Л.А. ; Сийдра, Олег Иоханнесович ; Мираков, Мирак ; Зайцев, Анатолий Николаевич ; Плечов, Павел ; Махмадшариф, С. / Ermakovite (NH4)(As2O3)2Br, a new exhalative arsenite bromide mineral from the Fan-Yagnob coal deposit, Tajikistan. In: Mineralogical Magazine. 2023 ; Vol. 87, No. 1. pp. 69-78.

BibTeX

@article{21003bdd11f840b4a153068a20318cad,
title = "Ermakovite (NH4)(As2O3)2Br, a new exhalative arsenite bromide mineral from the Fan-Yagnob coal deposit, Tajikistan",
abstract = " In terrestrial rocks, Br minerals are extremely rare with only nine minerals known where Br is a dominant component. A new arsenite bromide mineral ermakovite, (NH 4 )(As 2 O 3 ) 2 Br, was discovered at the tract of Kukhi-Malik, Fan-Yagnob coal deposit, ca. 75 km N of Dushanbe, Tajikistan. Ermakovite is a fumarolic mineral formed directly from gas from a natural underground coal fire. Associated minerals are sulfur, realgar, amorphous As-sulfides, salammoniac, alacr{\'a}nite, bonazziite and thermessaite-(NH 4 ). In addition, there are amorphous As 2 S 3 intergrowths associated with ermakovite. The mineral typically occurs as tabular or prismatic hexagonal crystals up to 200 μm with the following forms: c (001), m (010) and p (014). Spherulites and multi-twinned intergrowths are very common. The mineral is optically uniaxial (–), ω = 1.960 (5) and ɛ = 1.716(3) (589 nm). The measured density is 3.64(2) g/cm 3 . The mineral is insoluble in water, HCl, HNO 3 and organic solvents. The empirical formula calculated on the basis of (As+Sb) = 4 atoms per formula unit is [(NH 4 ) 0.92 Na 0.01 ] 0.93 (As 3.94 Sb 0.06 ) 4.00 O 6.02 (Br 0.97 Cl 0.08 I 0.01 ) 1.06 . The strongest lines in the powder X-ray diffraction pattern are [ d , {\AA} ( I , %) ( hkl )]: 9.160 (80)(001); 4.560(90)(002); 3.228(100) (102); 2.629(80)(110); and 2.522(60)(103). Ermakovite is hexagonal, P 6/ mmm , a = 5.271(3), c = 9.157(6) {\AA}, V = 220.3(3) {\AA} 3 and Z = 1. The sandwich-type structure of ermakovite is based on three types of layers: (1) a honeycomb [As 2 O 3 ] arsenite layer; (2) an NH 4 + layer; and (3) a Br layer. The layer stacking sequence is ⋅⋅⋅NH 4 –As 2 O 3 –Br–As 2 O 3 –NH 4 ⋅⋅⋅. Ermakovite has a synthetic analogue. Infrared and Raman spectra are also reported. An overview of the processes that give rise to high concentrations of Br, leading to the formation of exotic Br minerals, is given.",
author = "Владимир Карпенко and Л.А. Паутов and Сийдра, {Олег Иоханнесович} and Мирак Мираков and Зайцев, {Анатолий Николаевич} and Павел Плечов and С. Махмадшариф",
year = "2023",
month = feb,
day = "5",
doi = "10.1180/mgm.2022.116",
language = "English",
volume = "87",
pages = "69--78",
journal = "Mineralogical Magazine",
issn = "0026-461X",
publisher = "Mineralogical Society",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Ermakovite (NH4)(As2O3)2Br, a new exhalative arsenite bromide mineral from the Fan-Yagnob coal deposit, Tajikistan

AU - Карпенко, Владимир

AU - Паутов, Л.А.

AU - Сийдра, Олег Иоханнесович

AU - Мираков, Мирак

AU - Зайцев, Анатолий Николаевич

AU - Плечов, Павел

AU - Махмадшариф, С.

PY - 2023/2/5

Y1 - 2023/2/5

N2 - In terrestrial rocks, Br minerals are extremely rare with only nine minerals known where Br is a dominant component. A new arsenite bromide mineral ermakovite, (NH 4 )(As 2 O 3 ) 2 Br, was discovered at the tract of Kukhi-Malik, Fan-Yagnob coal deposit, ca. 75 km N of Dushanbe, Tajikistan. Ermakovite is a fumarolic mineral formed directly from gas from a natural underground coal fire. Associated minerals are sulfur, realgar, amorphous As-sulfides, salammoniac, alacránite, bonazziite and thermessaite-(NH 4 ). In addition, there are amorphous As 2 S 3 intergrowths associated with ermakovite. The mineral typically occurs as tabular or prismatic hexagonal crystals up to 200 μm with the following forms: c (001), m (010) and p (014). Spherulites and multi-twinned intergrowths are very common. The mineral is optically uniaxial (–), ω = 1.960 (5) and ɛ = 1.716(3) (589 nm). The measured density is 3.64(2) g/cm 3 . The mineral is insoluble in water, HCl, HNO 3 and organic solvents. The empirical formula calculated on the basis of (As+Sb) = 4 atoms per formula unit is [(NH 4 ) 0.92 Na 0.01 ] 0.93 (As 3.94 Sb 0.06 ) 4.00 O 6.02 (Br 0.97 Cl 0.08 I 0.01 ) 1.06 . The strongest lines in the powder X-ray diffraction pattern are [ d , Å ( I , %) ( hkl )]: 9.160 (80)(001); 4.560(90)(002); 3.228(100) (102); 2.629(80)(110); and 2.522(60)(103). Ermakovite is hexagonal, P 6/ mmm , a = 5.271(3), c = 9.157(6) Å, V = 220.3(3) Å 3 and Z = 1. The sandwich-type structure of ermakovite is based on three types of layers: (1) a honeycomb [As 2 O 3 ] arsenite layer; (2) an NH 4 + layer; and (3) a Br layer. The layer stacking sequence is ⋅⋅⋅NH 4 –As 2 O 3 –Br–As 2 O 3 –NH 4 ⋅⋅⋅. Ermakovite has a synthetic analogue. Infrared and Raman spectra are also reported. An overview of the processes that give rise to high concentrations of Br, leading to the formation of exotic Br minerals, is given.

AB - In terrestrial rocks, Br minerals are extremely rare with only nine minerals known where Br is a dominant component. A new arsenite bromide mineral ermakovite, (NH 4 )(As 2 O 3 ) 2 Br, was discovered at the tract of Kukhi-Malik, Fan-Yagnob coal deposit, ca. 75 km N of Dushanbe, Tajikistan. Ermakovite is a fumarolic mineral formed directly from gas from a natural underground coal fire. Associated minerals are sulfur, realgar, amorphous As-sulfides, salammoniac, alacránite, bonazziite and thermessaite-(NH 4 ). In addition, there are amorphous As 2 S 3 intergrowths associated with ermakovite. The mineral typically occurs as tabular or prismatic hexagonal crystals up to 200 μm with the following forms: c (001), m (010) and p (014). Spherulites and multi-twinned intergrowths are very common. The mineral is optically uniaxial (–), ω = 1.960 (5) and ɛ = 1.716(3) (589 nm). The measured density is 3.64(2) g/cm 3 . The mineral is insoluble in water, HCl, HNO 3 and organic solvents. The empirical formula calculated on the basis of (As+Sb) = 4 atoms per formula unit is [(NH 4 ) 0.92 Na 0.01 ] 0.93 (As 3.94 Sb 0.06 ) 4.00 O 6.02 (Br 0.97 Cl 0.08 I 0.01 ) 1.06 . The strongest lines in the powder X-ray diffraction pattern are [ d , Å ( I , %) ( hkl )]: 9.160 (80)(001); 4.560(90)(002); 3.228(100) (102); 2.629(80)(110); and 2.522(60)(103). Ermakovite is hexagonal, P 6/ mmm , a = 5.271(3), c = 9.157(6) Å, V = 220.3(3) Å 3 and Z = 1. The sandwich-type structure of ermakovite is based on three types of layers: (1) a honeycomb [As 2 O 3 ] arsenite layer; (2) an NH 4 + layer; and (3) a Br layer. The layer stacking sequence is ⋅⋅⋅NH 4 –As 2 O 3 –Br–As 2 O 3 –NH 4 ⋅⋅⋅. Ermakovite has a synthetic analogue. Infrared and Raman spectra are also reported. An overview of the processes that give rise to high concentrations of Br, leading to the formation of exotic Br minerals, is given.

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/8a31eb1c-98c9-33c6-8a1a-1a2432dfe44c/

U2 - 10.1180/mgm.2022.116

DO - 10.1180/mgm.2022.116

M3 - Article

VL - 87

SP - 69

EP - 78

JO - Mineralogical Magazine

JF - Mineralogical Magazine

SN - 0026-461X

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 104769361