Standard

Siudaite, Na8(Mn2+ 2Na)Ca6Fe3+ 3Zr3NbSi25O74(OH)2Cl·5H2O : a new eudialyte-group mineral from the Khibiny alkaline massif, Kola Peninsula. / Chukanov, Nikita V.; Rastsvetaeva, Ramiza K.; Kruszewski, Łukasz; Aksenov, Sergey M.; Rusakov, Vyacheslav S.; Britvin, Sergey N.; Vozchikova, Svetlana A.

в: Physics and Chemistry of Minerals, Том 45, № 8, 01.09.2018, стр. 745-758.

Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданияхстатьяРецензирование

Harvard

Chukanov, NV, Rastsvetaeva, RK, Kruszewski, Ł, Aksenov, SM, Rusakov, VS, Britvin, SN & Vozchikova, SA 2018, 'Siudaite, Na8(Mn2+ 2Na)Ca6Fe3+ 3Zr3NbSi25O74(OH)2Cl·5H2O: a new eudialyte-group mineral from the Khibiny alkaline massif, Kola Peninsula', Physics and Chemistry of Minerals, Том. 45, № 8, стр. 745-758. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00269-018-0959-9

APA

Chukanov, N. V., Rastsvetaeva, R. K., Kruszewski, Ł., Aksenov, S. M., Rusakov, V. S., Britvin, S. N., & Vozchikova, S. A. (2018). Siudaite, Na8(Mn2+ 2Na)Ca6Fe3+ 3Zr3NbSi25O74(OH)2Cl·5H2O: a new eudialyte-group mineral from the Khibiny alkaline massif, Kola Peninsula. Physics and Chemistry of Minerals, 45(8), 745-758. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00269-018-0959-9

Vancouver

Chukanov NV, Rastsvetaeva RK, Kruszewski Ł, Aksenov SM, Rusakov VS, Britvin SN и пр. Siudaite, Na8(Mn2+ 2Na)Ca6Fe3+ 3Zr3NbSi25O74(OH)2Cl·5H2O: a new eudialyte-group mineral from the Khibiny alkaline massif, Kola Peninsula. Physics and Chemistry of Minerals. 2018 Сент. 1;45(8):745-758. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00269-018-0959-9

Author

Chukanov, Nikita V. ; Rastsvetaeva, Ramiza K. ; Kruszewski, Łukasz ; Aksenov, Sergey M. ; Rusakov, Vyacheslav S. ; Britvin, Sergey N. ; Vozchikova, Svetlana A. / Siudaite, Na8(Mn2+ 2Na)Ca6Fe3+ 3Zr3NbSi25O74(OH)2Cl·5H2O : a new eudialyte-group mineral from the Khibiny alkaline massif, Kola Peninsula. в: Physics and Chemistry of Minerals. 2018 ; Том 45, № 8. стр. 745-758.

BibTeX

@article{88f562032e02471c86d9064c5d466690,
title = "Siudaite, Na8(Mn2+ 2Na)Ca6Fe3+ 3Zr3NbSi25O74(OH)2Cl·5H2O: a new eudialyte-group mineral from the Khibiny alkaline massif, Kola Peninsula",
abstract = "The new eudialyte-group mineral siudaite, ideally Na8(Mn2+ 2Na)Ca6Fe3+ 3Zr3NbSi25O74(OH)2Cl·5H2O, was discovered in a peralkaline pegmatite situated at the Eveslogchorr Mt., Khibiny alkaline massif, Kola Peninsula, Russia. The associated minerals are aegirine, albite, microcline, nepheline, astrophyllite, and loparite-(Ce). Siudaite forms yellow to brownish-yellow equant anhedral grains up to 1.5 cm across. Its lustre is vitreous, and the streak is white. Cleavage is none observed. The Mohs{\textquoteright} hardness is 4½. Density measured by hydrostatic weighing is 2.96(1) g/cm3. Density calculated using the empirical formula is equal to 2.973 g/cm3. Siudaite is nonpleochroic, optically uniaxial, negative, with ω = 1.635(1) and ε = 1.626(1) (λ = 589 nm). The IR spectrum is given. The chemical composition of siudaite is (wt%; electron microprobe, H2O determined by HCN analysis): Na2O 8.40, K2O 0.62, CaO 9.81, La2O3 1.03, Ce2O3 1.62, Pr2O3 0.21, Nd2O3 0.29, MnO 6.45, Fe2O3 4.51. TiO2 0.54, ZrO2 11.67, HfO2 0.29, Nb2O5 2.76, SiO2 47.20, Cl 0.54, H2O 3.5, –O = Cl − 0.12, total 99.32. According to M{\"o}ssbauer spectroscopy data, all iron is trivalent. The empirical formula (based on 24.5 Si atoms pfu, in accordance with structural data) is [Na7.57(H2O)1.43]Σ9(Mn1.11Na0.88Ce0.31La0.20Nd0.05Pr0.04K0.41)Σ3(H2O)1.8(Ca5.46Mn0.54)Σ6(Fe3+ 1.76Mn2+ 1.19)Σ2.95Nb0.65(Ti0.20Si0.50)Σ0.71(Zr2.95Hf0.04Ti0.01)Σ3Si24.00Cl0.47O70(OH)2Cl0.47·1.82H2O. The crystal structure was determined using single-crystal X-ray diffraction data. The new mineral is trigonal, space group R3m, with a = 14.1885(26) {\AA}, c = 29.831(7) {\AA}, V = 5200.8(23) {\AA}3 and Z = 3. Siudaite is chemically related to georgbarsanovite and is its analogue with Fe3+-dominant M2 site. The strongest lines of the powder X-ray diffraction pattern [d, {\AA} (I, %) (hkl)] are: 6.38 (60) (–114), 4.29 (55) (–225), 3.389 (47) (131), 3.191 (63) (–228). 2.963 (100) (4–15), 2.843 (99) (–444), 2.577 (49) (3–39). Siudaite is named after the Polish mineralogist and geochemist Rafa{\l} Siuda (b. 1975).",
keywords = "Crystal structure, Eudialyte group, IR spectroscopy, Khibiny massif, M{\"o}ssbauer spectroscopy, New mineral, Peralkaline pegmatite, Siudaite",
author = "Chukanov, {Nikita V.} and Rastsvetaeva, {Ramiza K.} and {\L}ukasz Kruszewski and Aksenov, {Sergey M.} and Rusakov, {Vyacheslav S.} and Britvin, {Sergey N.} and Vozchikova, {Svetlana A.}",
year = "2018",
month = sep,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1007/s00269-018-0959-9",
language = "English",
volume = "45",
pages = "745--758",
journal = "Physics and Chemistry of Minerals",
issn = "0342-1791",
publisher = "Springer Nature",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Siudaite, Na8(Mn2+ 2Na)Ca6Fe3+ 3Zr3NbSi25O74(OH)2Cl·5H2O

T2 - a new eudialyte-group mineral from the Khibiny alkaline massif, Kola Peninsula

AU - Chukanov, Nikita V.

AU - Rastsvetaeva, Ramiza K.

AU - Kruszewski, Łukasz

AU - Aksenov, Sergey M.

AU - Rusakov, Vyacheslav S.

AU - Britvin, Sergey N.

AU - Vozchikova, Svetlana A.

PY - 2018/9/1

Y1 - 2018/9/1

N2 - The new eudialyte-group mineral siudaite, ideally Na8(Mn2+ 2Na)Ca6Fe3+ 3Zr3NbSi25O74(OH)2Cl·5H2O, was discovered in a peralkaline pegmatite situated at the Eveslogchorr Mt., Khibiny alkaline massif, Kola Peninsula, Russia. The associated minerals are aegirine, albite, microcline, nepheline, astrophyllite, and loparite-(Ce). Siudaite forms yellow to brownish-yellow equant anhedral grains up to 1.5 cm across. Its lustre is vitreous, and the streak is white. Cleavage is none observed. The Mohs’ hardness is 4½. Density measured by hydrostatic weighing is 2.96(1) g/cm3. Density calculated using the empirical formula is equal to 2.973 g/cm3. Siudaite is nonpleochroic, optically uniaxial, negative, with ω = 1.635(1) and ε = 1.626(1) (λ = 589 nm). The IR spectrum is given. The chemical composition of siudaite is (wt%; electron microprobe, H2O determined by HCN analysis): Na2O 8.40, K2O 0.62, CaO 9.81, La2O3 1.03, Ce2O3 1.62, Pr2O3 0.21, Nd2O3 0.29, MnO 6.45, Fe2O3 4.51. TiO2 0.54, ZrO2 11.67, HfO2 0.29, Nb2O5 2.76, SiO2 47.20, Cl 0.54, H2O 3.5, –O = Cl − 0.12, total 99.32. According to Mössbauer spectroscopy data, all iron is trivalent. The empirical formula (based on 24.5 Si atoms pfu, in accordance with structural data) is [Na7.57(H2O)1.43]Σ9(Mn1.11Na0.88Ce0.31La0.20Nd0.05Pr0.04K0.41)Σ3(H2O)1.8(Ca5.46Mn0.54)Σ6(Fe3+ 1.76Mn2+ 1.19)Σ2.95Nb0.65(Ti0.20Si0.50)Σ0.71(Zr2.95Hf0.04Ti0.01)Σ3Si24.00Cl0.47O70(OH)2Cl0.47·1.82H2O. The crystal structure was determined using single-crystal X-ray diffraction data. The new mineral is trigonal, space group R3m, with a = 14.1885(26) Å, c = 29.831(7) Å, V = 5200.8(23) Å3 and Z = 3. Siudaite is chemically related to georgbarsanovite and is its analogue with Fe3+-dominant M2 site. The strongest lines of the powder X-ray diffraction pattern [d, Å (I, %) (hkl)] are: 6.38 (60) (–114), 4.29 (55) (–225), 3.389 (47) (131), 3.191 (63) (–228). 2.963 (100) (4–15), 2.843 (99) (–444), 2.577 (49) (3–39). Siudaite is named after the Polish mineralogist and geochemist Rafał Siuda (b. 1975).

AB - The new eudialyte-group mineral siudaite, ideally Na8(Mn2+ 2Na)Ca6Fe3+ 3Zr3NbSi25O74(OH)2Cl·5H2O, was discovered in a peralkaline pegmatite situated at the Eveslogchorr Mt., Khibiny alkaline massif, Kola Peninsula, Russia. The associated minerals are aegirine, albite, microcline, nepheline, astrophyllite, and loparite-(Ce). Siudaite forms yellow to brownish-yellow equant anhedral grains up to 1.5 cm across. Its lustre is vitreous, and the streak is white. Cleavage is none observed. The Mohs’ hardness is 4½. Density measured by hydrostatic weighing is 2.96(1) g/cm3. Density calculated using the empirical formula is equal to 2.973 g/cm3. Siudaite is nonpleochroic, optically uniaxial, negative, with ω = 1.635(1) and ε = 1.626(1) (λ = 589 nm). The IR spectrum is given. The chemical composition of siudaite is (wt%; electron microprobe, H2O determined by HCN analysis): Na2O 8.40, K2O 0.62, CaO 9.81, La2O3 1.03, Ce2O3 1.62, Pr2O3 0.21, Nd2O3 0.29, MnO 6.45, Fe2O3 4.51. TiO2 0.54, ZrO2 11.67, HfO2 0.29, Nb2O5 2.76, SiO2 47.20, Cl 0.54, H2O 3.5, –O = Cl − 0.12, total 99.32. According to Mössbauer spectroscopy data, all iron is trivalent. The empirical formula (based on 24.5 Si atoms pfu, in accordance with structural data) is [Na7.57(H2O)1.43]Σ9(Mn1.11Na0.88Ce0.31La0.20Nd0.05Pr0.04K0.41)Σ3(H2O)1.8(Ca5.46Mn0.54)Σ6(Fe3+ 1.76Mn2+ 1.19)Σ2.95Nb0.65(Ti0.20Si0.50)Σ0.71(Zr2.95Hf0.04Ti0.01)Σ3Si24.00Cl0.47O70(OH)2Cl0.47·1.82H2O. The crystal structure was determined using single-crystal X-ray diffraction data. The new mineral is trigonal, space group R3m, with a = 14.1885(26) Å, c = 29.831(7) Å, V = 5200.8(23) Å3 and Z = 3. Siudaite is chemically related to georgbarsanovite and is its analogue with Fe3+-dominant M2 site. The strongest lines of the powder X-ray diffraction pattern [d, Å (I, %) (hkl)] are: 6.38 (60) (–114), 4.29 (55) (–225), 3.389 (47) (131), 3.191 (63) (–228). 2.963 (100) (4–15), 2.843 (99) (–444), 2.577 (49) (3–39). Siudaite is named after the Polish mineralogist and geochemist Rafał Siuda (b. 1975).

KW - Crystal structure

KW - Eudialyte group

KW - IR spectroscopy

KW - Khibiny massif

KW - Mössbauer spectroscopy

KW - New mineral

KW - Peralkaline pegmatite

KW - Siudaite

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85043389392&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1007/s00269-018-0959-9

DO - 10.1007/s00269-018-0959-9

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85043389392

VL - 45

SP - 745

EP - 758

JO - Physics and Chemistry of Minerals

JF - Physics and Chemistry of Minerals

SN - 0342-1791

IS - 8

ER -

ID: 39032194