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Mineralogical ClassificationLausenite (synthetic) structure determination

3rd Feb 2005 22:47 UTCMarco E. Ciriotti

Reference and abstract from Amer. Mineral., concerning a synthetic analogue of lausenite.


Majzlan, J., Botez, C., Stephen, P.W. (2005): The crystal structures of synthetics Fe2(SO4)3(H2O)5 and the type specimen of lausenite. The American Mineralogist, 90, 411-416.


Abstract:

An iron sulfate of nominal composition Fe2(SO4)3(H2O)5 has been synthesized and its structure determined and refined by high resolution powder diffraction using synchrotron radiation. The structure consists of corrugated slabs in which iron octahedra are linked by sulfate tetrahedra in the monoclinic space group P21/m with lattice parameters a = 10.711(1), b = 11.085(1), and c = 5.5747(5) Å, β = 98.853(3)°. We compare these results with the type specimen of lausenite from Jerome, Arizona, which has monoclinic lattice parameters a = 10.679(2), b = 11.053(3), and c = 5.567(1) Å, β = 98.89(1)°. Weight loss experiments show that it is currently a pentahydrate, despite earlier reports that lausenite is a hexahydrate. We argue that our synthetic material provides a structure determination for the type specimen of lausenite.
 
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