THE CRYSTAL CHEMISTRY OF MALINKOITE, NABSIO4, AND LISITSYNITE, KBSI2O6, FROM THE KHIBINA-LOVOZERO COMPLEX, KOLA PENINSULA, RUSSIA

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dc.contributor.author Sokolova E.V.
dc.contributor.author Hawthorne F.C.
dc.contributor.author Khomyakov A.P.
dc.date.accessioned 2021-02-20T08:12:57Z
dc.date.available 2021-02-20T08:12:57Z
dc.date.issued 2001
dc.identifier https://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=13375701
dc.identifier.citation The Canadian Mineralogist, 2001, 39, 1, 159-169
dc.identifier.issn 0008-4476
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/25275
dc.description.abstract The crystal structure of malinkoite, NaBSiO4, a 13.8964(4) Å, c 7.7001(2) Å, P63, Z = 18, Dx = 2.922 g cm-3, from the Khibina-Lovozero complex, Kola peninsula, Russia, has been solved by direct methods and refined to an R index of 3.8% using 2094 unique observed (|Fo| > 4σF) reflections collected with a single-crystal diffractometer fitted with a CCD detector and MoKα X-radiation. Malinkoite is a framework borosilicate with a structure consisting of six-membered rings of regularly alternating (SiO4) and (BO4) tetrahedra, and Na located in the large channels extending along [001]. There are three unique Si sites, each occupied by Si and each coordinated by four O atoms in a tetrahedral arrangement, with distances of 1.625, 1.622 and 1.622 Å, respectively. There are three unique B sites, each occupied by B and each coordinated by four O atoms in a tetrahedral arrangement, with distances of 1.476, 1.476 and 1.473 Å, respectively. There are five unique Na sites, each completely occupied by Na. Three of the Na sites are [9]-coordinated, with distances of 2.626, 2.642 and 2.630 Å, respectively; the remaining two Na sites are [6]-coordinated, with distances of 2.444 and 2.440 Å, respectively. The (SiO4) and (BO4) tetrahedra link to form six-membered rings of two different configurations based on the following sequences of up (U) and down (D) linkages: UDUDUD and UUDUDD in the ratio of 1:2. Nine-coordinated Na polyhedra are located in big cages formed by stacking of UDUDUD rings. Stacking of UUDUDD rings produces smaller cages occupied by [6]-coordinated Na. In accord with the ratio of two types of rings, there are twelve Na octahedra and six [9]-coordinated Na polyhedra per unit cell in malinkoite. The framework topology is related to that of beryllonite NaBePO4. In the crystal structure of lisitsynite, KBSi2O6, four-membered rings consist of two (SiO4) and two (BO4) tetrahedra, and are linked into zig-zag chains (puckered ladders) along [001]. There are two types of chemically distinct six- and eight-membered rings: (4Si + 2B) and (5Si + B); (5Si + 3B) and (6Si + 2B). Two different pairs of six-membered and eight-membered rings, (4Si + 2B) and (5Si + 3B), and (5Si + B) and (6Si + 2B), respectively, form sheets on (100) and (010). Stacking of sheets and zig-zag chains gives rise to a three-dimensional framework. There are one-dimensional seven-ring channels along the c direction. Lisitsynite, KBSi2O6, and synthetic "boroleucite", K(Si2 B)O6, may be regarded as polymorphs with different patterns of Si-B order.
dc.subject malinkoite
dc.subject lisitsynite
dc.subject new mineral species
dc.subject borosilicate
dc.subject crystal structure
dc.subject Khibina
dc.subject Lovozero
dc.subject Russia
dc.title THE CRYSTAL CHEMISTRY OF MALINKOITE, NABSIO4, AND LISITSYNITE, KBSI2O6, FROM THE KHIBINA-LOVOZERO COMPLEX, KOLA PENINSULA, RUSSIA
dc.type Статья


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