Standard

Paratobermorite, Ca4(Al0.5Si0.5)2Si4O16(OH)·2H2O·(Ca·3H2O), a new tobermorite-supergroup mineral with a novel topological type of the microporous crystal structure. / Pekov, I.V.; Zubkova, Natalia V.; Chukanov , N.V.; Merlino, Stefano; Yapaskurt, V.O.; Belakovsky, Dmitry I.; Loskutov, A. B.; Novgorodova, E. A.; Vozchikova, Svetlana A.; Бритвин, Сергей Николаевич; Pushcharovsky, D.Y.U.

In: American Mineralogist, Vol. 107, No. 12, 01.12.2022, p. 2272-2281.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Pekov, IV, Zubkova, NV, Chukanov , NV, Merlino, S, Yapaskurt, VO, Belakovsky, DI, Loskutov, AB, Novgorodova, EA, Vozchikova, SA, Бритвин, СН & Pushcharovsky, DYU 2022, 'Paratobermorite, Ca4(Al0.5Si0.5)2Si4O16(OH)·2H2O·(Ca·3H2O), a new tobermorite-supergroup mineral with a novel topological type of the microporous crystal structure', American Mineralogist, vol. 107, no. 12, pp. 2272-2281. https://doi.org/10.2138/am-2022-8284

APA

Pekov, I. V., Zubkova, N. V., Chukanov , N. V., Merlino, S., Yapaskurt, V. O., Belakovsky, D. I., Loskutov, A. B., Novgorodova, E. A., Vozchikova, S. A., Бритвин, С. Н., & Pushcharovsky, D. Y. U. (2022). Paratobermorite, Ca4(Al0.5Si0.5)2Si4O16(OH)·2H2O·(Ca·3H2O), a new tobermorite-supergroup mineral with a novel topological type of the microporous crystal structure. American Mineralogist, 107(12), 2272-2281. https://doi.org/10.2138/am-2022-8284

Vancouver

Pekov IV, Zubkova NV, Chukanov NV, Merlino S, Yapaskurt VO, Belakovsky DI et al. Paratobermorite, Ca4(Al0.5Si0.5)2Si4O16(OH)·2H2O·(Ca·3H2O), a new tobermorite-supergroup mineral with a novel topological type of the microporous crystal structure. American Mineralogist. 2022 Dec 1;107(12):2272-2281. https://doi.org/10.2138/am-2022-8284

Author

Pekov, I.V. ; Zubkova, Natalia V. ; Chukanov , N.V. ; Merlino, Stefano ; Yapaskurt, V.O. ; Belakovsky, Dmitry I. ; Loskutov, A. B. ; Novgorodova, E. A. ; Vozchikova, Svetlana A. ; Бритвин, Сергей Николаевич ; Pushcharovsky, D.Y.U. / Paratobermorite, Ca4(Al0.5Si0.5)2Si4O16(OH)·2H2O·(Ca·3H2O), a new tobermorite-supergroup mineral with a novel topological type of the microporous crystal structure. In: American Mineralogist. 2022 ; Vol. 107, No. 12. pp. 2272-2281.

BibTeX

@article{54dc46177e0d4fa6947ebc1e0423c61e,
title = "Paratobermorite, Ca4(Al0.5Si0.5)2Si4O16(OH)·2H2O·(Ca·3H2O), a new tobermorite-supergroup mineral with a novel topological type of the microporous crystal structure",
abstract = "A new mineral paratobermorite with the ideal crystal-chemical formula Ca 4(Al 0.5Si 0.5) 2Si 4O 16 (OH)·2H 2O·(Ca·3H 2O) is a member of the tobermorite group within the tobermorite supergroup. It was found at the Bazhenovskoe chrysotile asbestos deposit, Central Urals, Russia, in cavities of grossular rodingite in association with prehnite, pectolite, thomsonite-Ca, and calcite. Paratobermorite occurs as well-shaped prismatic to acicular crystals up to 1 × 1.5 × 8 mm 3 typically assembled in spray- or bush-like radial clusters or open-work aggregates up to 1.5 cm across, which form interrupted crusts up to 3 × 5 cm 2. Paratobermorite is transparent, colorless, pale yellowish, pale beige, or pinkish, with a vitreous luster. The mineral is brittle, with the (001) perfect cleavage. The Mohs hardness is ca. 3½. D meas = 2.51 (2) and D calc = 2.533 g/cm 3. Paratobermorite is optically biaxial (+), α = 1.565 (2), β = 1.566 (2), γ = 1.578 (2), 2 V meas = 25 (10)° and 2 V calc = 32° (589 nm). Optical orientation is: X = c, Y = b, Z = a. The chemical composition of paratobermorite (electron microprobe, H 2O by selective sorption from gaseous products of heating) is Na 2O 0.40, K 2O 0.28, CaO 36.60, MnO 0.04, BaO 0.07, Al 2O 3 6.46, SiO 2 42.32, H 2O 14.10, total 100.27 wt%. The empirical formula calculated on the basis of 22 O atoms per formula unit and (O,OH) 17·5H 2O is Na 0.09K 0.04Ca 4.72Al 0.92Si 5.09O 15.69(OH) 1.31·5H 2O. Like other members of the tobermorite supergroup, paratobermorite displays OD character, with two MDO (maximum degree of order) structures: one (MDO1), with non-standard space group F2/d11 and the second (MDO2), just corresponding to the structure-type of the new mineral, with non-standard space group C112 1/m; its unit-cell parameters obtained from single-crystal X‑ray diffraction data are: a = 11.2220(4), b = 7.3777(2), c = 22.9425(8) {\AA}, γ = 89.990(3)°, V = 1899.46(10) {\AA} 3, and Z = 4; polytype 2M. The structure of paratobermorite is solved on a single crystal, R = 8.36%. Like structures of other “tobermorites 11 {\AA},” it is based on the complex layer built of a sheet of sevenfold Ca-centered polyhedra with wollastonite-type chains of T tetrahedra attached to the Ca-sheet from both sides. The tetrahedral (T) sites T1 and T2 are fully occupied by Si, while alternating T3 and T4 sites are filled by Al and Si in the ratio 1:1. The chains of tetrahedra belonging to neighboring complex layers share common oxygen vertices of the bridging T3,4 tetrahedra to form xonotlite-type ribbons [Si 6O 17] ∞. The heteropolyhedral Ca-T‑O scaffolding appears as a microporous quasi-framework with wide channels, which contain additional Ca atoms and H 2O molecules. The complex Ca-T‑O layers in paratobermorite (so‑called “complex modules of type A”) significantly differ in topology (mutual arrangement of T tetrahedra and Ca polyhedra) from the complex Ca-T-O layers in tobermorite (“complex modules of type B”). IR spectrum confirms the presence of nonequivalent H 2O molecules and nonequivalent T-O-T angles involving T atoms of two neighboring wollastonite-type chains. Due to the original topological type of the structure and the presence of significant amount of Al, which substitutes Si, paratobermorite can be considered as a novel microporous material, a perspective cation-exchanger. ",
keywords = "Bazhenovskoe deposit, IR spectroscopy, OD character, Paratobermorite, Portland cement, calcium silicate hydrate, crystal structure, ion exchanger, new mineral, rodingite, tobermorite group",
author = "I.V. Pekov and Zubkova, {Natalia V.} and N.V. Chukanov and Stefano Merlino and V.O. Yapaskurt and Belakovsky, {Dmitry I.} and Loskutov, {A. B.} and Novgorodova, {E. A.} and Vozchikova, {Svetlana A.} and Бритвин, {Сергей Николаевич} and D.Y.U. Pushcharovsky",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2022 De Gruyter. All rights reserved.",
year = "2022",
month = dec,
day = "1",
doi = "10.2138/am-2022-8284",
language = "English",
volume = "107",
pages = "2272--2281",
journal = "American Mineralogist",
issn = "0003-004X",
publisher = "Mineralogical Society of America",
number = "12",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Paratobermorite, Ca4(Al0.5Si0.5)2Si4O16(OH)·2H2O·(Ca·3H2O), a new tobermorite-supergroup mineral with a novel topological type of the microporous crystal structure

AU - Pekov, I.V.

AU - Zubkova, Natalia V.

AU - Chukanov , N.V.

AU - Merlino, Stefano

AU - Yapaskurt, V.O.

AU - Belakovsky, Dmitry I.

AU - Loskutov, A. B.

AU - Novgorodova, E. A.

AU - Vozchikova, Svetlana A.

AU - Бритвин, Сергей Николаевич

AU - Pushcharovsky, D.Y.U.

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2022 De Gruyter. All rights reserved.

PY - 2022/12/1

Y1 - 2022/12/1

N2 - A new mineral paratobermorite with the ideal crystal-chemical formula Ca 4(Al 0.5Si 0.5) 2Si 4O 16 (OH)·2H 2O·(Ca·3H 2O) is a member of the tobermorite group within the tobermorite supergroup. It was found at the Bazhenovskoe chrysotile asbestos deposit, Central Urals, Russia, in cavities of grossular rodingite in association with prehnite, pectolite, thomsonite-Ca, and calcite. Paratobermorite occurs as well-shaped prismatic to acicular crystals up to 1 × 1.5 × 8 mm 3 typically assembled in spray- or bush-like radial clusters or open-work aggregates up to 1.5 cm across, which form interrupted crusts up to 3 × 5 cm 2. Paratobermorite is transparent, colorless, pale yellowish, pale beige, or pinkish, with a vitreous luster. The mineral is brittle, with the (001) perfect cleavage. The Mohs hardness is ca. 3½. D meas = 2.51 (2) and D calc = 2.533 g/cm 3. Paratobermorite is optically biaxial (+), α = 1.565 (2), β = 1.566 (2), γ = 1.578 (2), 2 V meas = 25 (10)° and 2 V calc = 32° (589 nm). Optical orientation is: X = c, Y = b, Z = a. The chemical composition of paratobermorite (electron microprobe, H 2O by selective sorption from gaseous products of heating) is Na 2O 0.40, K 2O 0.28, CaO 36.60, MnO 0.04, BaO 0.07, Al 2O 3 6.46, SiO 2 42.32, H 2O 14.10, total 100.27 wt%. The empirical formula calculated on the basis of 22 O atoms per formula unit and (O,OH) 17·5H 2O is Na 0.09K 0.04Ca 4.72Al 0.92Si 5.09O 15.69(OH) 1.31·5H 2O. Like other members of the tobermorite supergroup, paratobermorite displays OD character, with two MDO (maximum degree of order) structures: one (MDO1), with non-standard space group F2/d11 and the second (MDO2), just corresponding to the structure-type of the new mineral, with non-standard space group C112 1/m; its unit-cell parameters obtained from single-crystal X‑ray diffraction data are: a = 11.2220(4), b = 7.3777(2), c = 22.9425(8) Å, γ = 89.990(3)°, V = 1899.46(10) Å 3, and Z = 4; polytype 2M. The structure of paratobermorite is solved on a single crystal, R = 8.36%. Like structures of other “tobermorites 11 Å,” it is based on the complex layer built of a sheet of sevenfold Ca-centered polyhedra with wollastonite-type chains of T tetrahedra attached to the Ca-sheet from both sides. The tetrahedral (T) sites T1 and T2 are fully occupied by Si, while alternating T3 and T4 sites are filled by Al and Si in the ratio 1:1. The chains of tetrahedra belonging to neighboring complex layers share common oxygen vertices of the bridging T3,4 tetrahedra to form xonotlite-type ribbons [Si 6O 17] ∞. The heteropolyhedral Ca-T‑O scaffolding appears as a microporous quasi-framework with wide channels, which contain additional Ca atoms and H 2O molecules. The complex Ca-T‑O layers in paratobermorite (so‑called “complex modules of type A”) significantly differ in topology (mutual arrangement of T tetrahedra and Ca polyhedra) from the complex Ca-T-O layers in tobermorite (“complex modules of type B”). IR spectrum confirms the presence of nonequivalent H 2O molecules and nonequivalent T-O-T angles involving T atoms of two neighboring wollastonite-type chains. Due to the original topological type of the structure and the presence of significant amount of Al, which substitutes Si, paratobermorite can be considered as a novel microporous material, a perspective cation-exchanger.

AB - A new mineral paratobermorite with the ideal crystal-chemical formula Ca 4(Al 0.5Si 0.5) 2Si 4O 16 (OH)·2H 2O·(Ca·3H 2O) is a member of the tobermorite group within the tobermorite supergroup. It was found at the Bazhenovskoe chrysotile asbestos deposit, Central Urals, Russia, in cavities of grossular rodingite in association with prehnite, pectolite, thomsonite-Ca, and calcite. Paratobermorite occurs as well-shaped prismatic to acicular crystals up to 1 × 1.5 × 8 mm 3 typically assembled in spray- or bush-like radial clusters or open-work aggregates up to 1.5 cm across, which form interrupted crusts up to 3 × 5 cm 2. Paratobermorite is transparent, colorless, pale yellowish, pale beige, or pinkish, with a vitreous luster. The mineral is brittle, with the (001) perfect cleavage. The Mohs hardness is ca. 3½. D meas = 2.51 (2) and D calc = 2.533 g/cm 3. Paratobermorite is optically biaxial (+), α = 1.565 (2), β = 1.566 (2), γ = 1.578 (2), 2 V meas = 25 (10)° and 2 V calc = 32° (589 nm). Optical orientation is: X = c, Y = b, Z = a. The chemical composition of paratobermorite (electron microprobe, H 2O by selective sorption from gaseous products of heating) is Na 2O 0.40, K 2O 0.28, CaO 36.60, MnO 0.04, BaO 0.07, Al 2O 3 6.46, SiO 2 42.32, H 2O 14.10, total 100.27 wt%. The empirical formula calculated on the basis of 22 O atoms per formula unit and (O,OH) 17·5H 2O is Na 0.09K 0.04Ca 4.72Al 0.92Si 5.09O 15.69(OH) 1.31·5H 2O. Like other members of the tobermorite supergroup, paratobermorite displays OD character, with two MDO (maximum degree of order) structures: one (MDO1), with non-standard space group F2/d11 and the second (MDO2), just corresponding to the structure-type of the new mineral, with non-standard space group C112 1/m; its unit-cell parameters obtained from single-crystal X‑ray diffraction data are: a = 11.2220(4), b = 7.3777(2), c = 22.9425(8) Å, γ = 89.990(3)°, V = 1899.46(10) Å 3, and Z = 4; polytype 2M. The structure of paratobermorite is solved on a single crystal, R = 8.36%. Like structures of other “tobermorites 11 Å,” it is based on the complex layer built of a sheet of sevenfold Ca-centered polyhedra with wollastonite-type chains of T tetrahedra attached to the Ca-sheet from both sides. The tetrahedral (T) sites T1 and T2 are fully occupied by Si, while alternating T3 and T4 sites are filled by Al and Si in the ratio 1:1. The chains of tetrahedra belonging to neighboring complex layers share common oxygen vertices of the bridging T3,4 tetrahedra to form xonotlite-type ribbons [Si 6O 17] ∞. The heteropolyhedral Ca-T‑O scaffolding appears as a microporous quasi-framework with wide channels, which contain additional Ca atoms and H 2O molecules. The complex Ca-T‑O layers in paratobermorite (so‑called “complex modules of type A”) significantly differ in topology (mutual arrangement of T tetrahedra and Ca polyhedra) from the complex Ca-T-O layers in tobermorite (“complex modules of type B”). IR spectrum confirms the presence of nonequivalent H 2O molecules and nonequivalent T-O-T angles involving T atoms of two neighboring wollastonite-type chains. Due to the original topological type of the structure and the presence of significant amount of Al, which substitutes Si, paratobermorite can be considered as a novel microporous material, a perspective cation-exchanger.

KW - Bazhenovskoe deposit

KW - IR spectroscopy

KW - OD character

KW - Paratobermorite

KW - Portland cement

KW - calcium silicate hydrate

KW - crystal structure

KW - ion exchanger

KW - new mineral

KW - rodingite

KW - tobermorite group

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/56e9c49b-ea9e-3f3a-a119-682838b48421/

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85143624996&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.2138/am-2022-8284

DO - 10.2138/am-2022-8284

M3 - Article

VL - 107

SP - 2272

EP - 2281

JO - American Mineralogist

JF - American Mineralogist

SN - 0003-004X

IS - 12

ER -

ID: 99728365