The thermal behavior of synthetic richterite Na-A(B)(NaCa)(Mg5Si8O22)-Mg-C-Si-T(OH)(2), crystallized at 800 degrees C and 0.35 GPa under hydrothermal conditions, was studied by serial powder diffraction experiments using synchrotron radiation between 123 and 873 K. The a, b, and beta cell parameters show a non-linear behavior, whereas the c parameter shows a linear trend; values of the saturation temperature theta(s) are 410(3), 215(2), and 300(2) K for a, b, and asin beta, respectively. The axial expansion pattern below room temperature is alpha(b) > alpha(c) > alpha(a), whereas above room T it is alpha(b) > alpha(a) > alpha(c), the difference being related to the different saturation temperatures of the individual cell parameters. The thermal expansion was modeled following the Debye approximation for the density-of-state of phonons; the refined parameters are V-0 = 908.20 (0.04) angstrom(3), k = 1 (4), Q(0) = 32 (2) MJ, and the Debye temperature theta(D) = 586(31) K. The non-linear behavior at low T is well described without systematic differences between the data and the model. The volume thermal expansion coefficient alpha(F) changes significantly with temperature, also at temperatures higher than room temperature. It is suggested that this may occur also in other amphiboles and pyroxenes, requiring critical re-examination of the available data. A comparison of the strain tensor for the thermal expansion between amphiboles and pyroxenes shows that in amphiboles the major deformation occurs onto the (010) plane, whereas in pyroxenes it occurs along the b axis. Moreover, the major deformation on (010) in Ca-bearing pyroxenes occurs along the bond of the M2 cation with the furthermost O3 atoms, whereas in compositionally related Ca-amphiboles (i.e., tremolite) it occurs in a direction rotated by 10-20 degrees to a*, i.e., in a direction not corresponding to that of the M4-O5 bonds. It is proposed that the M4 polyhedron contributes less to the thermal deformation of amphibole than the M2 polyhedron contributes to the thermal deformation of pyroxene.
Tribaudino, M., Bruno, M., Iezzi, G., DELLA VENTURA, G., Margiolaki, I. (2008). The Thermal behaviour of richterite. AMERICAN MINERALOGIST, 93, 1659-1665 [10.2138/am.2008.2895].
The Thermal behaviour of richterite
DELLA VENTURA, Giancarlo;
2008-01-01
Abstract
The thermal behavior of synthetic richterite Na-A(B)(NaCa)(Mg5Si8O22)-Mg-C-Si-T(OH)(2), crystallized at 800 degrees C and 0.35 GPa under hydrothermal conditions, was studied by serial powder diffraction experiments using synchrotron radiation between 123 and 873 K. The a, b, and beta cell parameters show a non-linear behavior, whereas the c parameter shows a linear trend; values of the saturation temperature theta(s) are 410(3), 215(2), and 300(2) K for a, b, and asin beta, respectively. The axial expansion pattern below room temperature is alpha(b) > alpha(c) > alpha(a), whereas above room T it is alpha(b) > alpha(a) > alpha(c), the difference being related to the different saturation temperatures of the individual cell parameters. The thermal expansion was modeled following the Debye approximation for the density-of-state of phonons; the refined parameters are V-0 = 908.20 (0.04) angstrom(3), k = 1 (4), Q(0) = 32 (2) MJ, and the Debye temperature theta(D) = 586(31) K. The non-linear behavior at low T is well described without systematic differences between the data and the model. The volume thermal expansion coefficient alpha(F) changes significantly with temperature, also at temperatures higher than room temperature. It is suggested that this may occur also in other amphiboles and pyroxenes, requiring critical re-examination of the available data. A comparison of the strain tensor for the thermal expansion between amphiboles and pyroxenes shows that in amphiboles the major deformation occurs onto the (010) plane, whereas in pyroxenes it occurs along the b axis. Moreover, the major deformation on (010) in Ca-bearing pyroxenes occurs along the bond of the M2 cation with the furthermost O3 atoms, whereas in compositionally related Ca-amphiboles (i.e., tremolite) it occurs in a direction rotated by 10-20 degrees to a*, i.e., in a direction not corresponding to that of the M4-O5 bonds. It is proposed that the M4 polyhedron contributes less to the thermal deformation of amphibole than the M2 polyhedron contributes to the thermal deformation of pyroxene.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.