Minerals with Brackebuschite-Like Structures: A Novel Solid Solution System Involving Cr6+ and V5+
- Authors: Khanin D.A.1, Pekov I.V.1
 - 
							Affiliations: 
							
- Geological Faculty
 
 - Issue: Vol 59, No 7 (2017)
 - Pages: 642-651
 - Section: Mineralogical Crystallography
 - URL: https://journals.rcsi.science/1075-7015/article/view/215267
 - DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S1075701517070042
 - ID: 215267
 
Cite item
Abstract
A novel complex continuous system of solid solutions involving vauquelinite Pb2Cu(CrO4)(PO4)(OH), bushmakinite Pb2Al(VO4)(PO4)(OH), ferribushmakinite Pb2Fe3+(VO4)(PO4)(OH), and a phase with the endmember formula Pb2Cu(VO4)(PO4)(H2O) or Pb2Cu(VO4)(РО3ОН)(ОН) is studied based on samples from the oxidation zone of the Berezovskoe, Trebiat, and Pervomaisko-Zverevsky deposits in the Urals, Russia. This is the first natural system in which chromate and vanadate anions show a wide range of substitutions and the most extensive solid solution system involving (CrO4)2– found in nature. The major couple substitution is Cr6+ + Cu2+ ↔ V5+ + M3+, where M = Fe, Al. The correlation coefficients calculated from 125 point analyses are: 0.96 between V and (Fe + Al), 0.96 between Cr and (Cu + Zn),–0.96 between V and (Cu + Zn),–0.97 between Cr and (Fe + Al), and–0.97 between (Fe + Al) and (Cu + Zn). The substitutions V5+ ↔ Cr6+ (correlation coefficient–0.98) and to a lesser extent P5+ ↔ As5+ (correlation coefficient–0.86) occur at two types of tetrahedral sites, whereas the metal–nonmetal/metalloid substitutions, i.e., V or Cr for P or As, are minor. The substitution Fe3+ ↔ Al3+ is also negligible in this solid solution system.
About the authors
D. A. Khanin
Geological Faculty
							Author for correspondence.
							Email: mamontenok49@yandex.ru
				                					                																			                												                	Russian Federation, 							Moscow, 119991						
I. V. Pekov
Geological Faculty
														Email: mamontenok49@yandex.ru
				                					                																			                												                	Russian Federation, 							Moscow, 119991						
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