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Mineralogical ClassificationIMA 2010-077 = eldragonite

17th Jul 2012 14:07 UTCChris Stanley Expert

Eldragonite is published and an e-print can be supplied.


Eldragónite, with the simplified formula Cu6BiSe4(Se2), is a new mineral species discovered in a telethermal vein-type deposit with selenides at the El Dragón mine, Province of Quijarro, Department of Potosí, Bolivia. It forms inclusions in kruťaite, and is associated with clausthalite, klockmannite, umangite and tiemannite, as well as with watkinsonite, petrovicite and two unnamed phases in the system Cu–Pb–Hg–Bi–Se. The unique vein of eldragónite-bearing kruťaite is hosted within sandstones and shales of Devonian age. Eldragónite occurs in anhedral grains and polycrystalline aggregates attaining a size of up to 100 3 80 mm. Megascopically, the mineral has a brownish to light-maroon color, is opaque and lacks internal reflections. It has a metallic luster and a brownish black streak, is brittle with an uneven to conchoidal fracture, without observable cleavage. The VHN15 values range between 212 and 243 (mean 225) kg/mm2, corresponding to a Mohs hardness of ~3 ½. In plane-polarized light, eldragónite is distinctly bireflectant and pleochroic, from light grayish brown to cream; it is strongly anisotropic with rotation tints in shades of orange and blue-black. The reflectances (in air and oil, respectively) for the COM standard wavelengths are: 32.5–34.5, 17.7–19.7 (470 nm), 32.95–36.3, 18.0–21.4 (546 nm), 33.3–36.8, 18.3–21.6 (589 nm), 34.0–36.9, 19.1–21.7 (650 nm). Electron-microprobe analyses gave (mean of 24 analyses): Cu 35.9, Fe 1.25, Ni 0.35, Bi 20.3, Se 42.5, total 100.3 wt.%, corresponding to (Cu5.98Fe0.24Ni0.06)S6.28Bi1.03Se5.70. The ideal formula is Cu6BiSe4(Se2), which requires Cu 35.84, Bi 19.64,Se 44.52 wt.%. Eldragónite has an orthorhombic cell, space group Pmcn, with a 4.0341(4), b 27.056(3), c 9.5559(9) Å, V 1043.0(3) Å3, and Z = 4. The calculated density is 6.76 g/cm3. The strongest X-ray powder-diffraction lines are: 6.547(58)031, 3.579(100)052, 3.253(48)141, 3.180(77)081, 3.165(56)013, 3.075(84)102, 3.065(75)151,112, 2.011(53)200,

1.920(76)154, 1.846(52)1103. The crystal structure was solved from single-crystal data, and was refined to R1= 0.026 on the

basis of 1731 unique reflections. There are one Bi and six Cu positions. Among the six Se positions, two Se atoms form a Se2 pair
; eldragónite is thus a mixed selenide–diselenide compound. The crystal structure is organized according

to two slabs alternating along a. The thin slab with formula Cu6Se6 is a zigzag layer derived from the CaF2 archetype; the thick

slab, Cu6Bi2Se6, is similar to that of wittichenite, Cu3BiS3. The Se2 pair is at the junction between these two slabs. This new

mineral species is named after the location where it was discovered.

17th Jul 2012 18:58 UTCEvan Johnson

" Eldragónite occurs in anhedral grains and polycrystalline aggregates attaining a size of up to 100 3 80 mm" What does this mean? The dimensions in mm, like p x q x r?

17th Jul 2012 19:10 UTCAlfredo Petrov Manager

Nothing much there in millimeter sizes. Micro something or other.

17th Jul 2012 19:43 UTCFrank Keutsch Expert

symbol problem: 100 x 80 micron


Frank

17th Jul 2012 23:23 UTCEvan Johnson

Thanks, didn't mean to be annoying about it, just would have been shockingly large had it been decamillimetric.
Cool chemistry/structure in any case, fwiw.
 
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