Abstract:
Stacking structures in pyrophyllite, Al2Si4 O10(OH)2, were investigated mainly by using high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM). The specimens examined were large lath-shaped crystals (Berosovska, Urals, Russia) and massive aggregates of fine platy crystals (Nohwa, southwest Korea). Both specimens showed powder X-ray diffraction (XRD) patterns similar to those reported previously as the 2M polytype. The common stacking sequence in the two specimens is not monoclinic with two-layer periodicity as previously reported, but a uniform orientation of the 2:1 layers and near complete disorder of two alternative directions of interlayer displacement, i.e., lateral displacement between the two tetrahedral sheets across an interlayer region. The directions of interlayer displacement are about ±2π/3 from that of the intralayer shift (lateral displacement between the two tetrahedral sheets within a 2:1 layer). Simulation of powder XRD patterns by this stacking model closely approximates the experimental pattern. Elongation of the lath-shaped Berosovska crystals corresponds to the direction of the intralayer shift, as seen in illite-1M. 2:1 layers with different orientations, and interlayer displacement almost parallel to the intralayer shift, were occasionally observed as stacking faults. Such disorder occurs more frequently in the massive Nohwa specimen than in the Berosovska specimen. Sub-micrometer domains of the 2M stacking sequence with regular alternation of the two directions of interlayer displacement were found in the Nohwa specimen.