4.2 Article

High-temperature ramsdellite-pyrolusite transformation kinetics

Journal

PHYSICS AND CHEMISTRY OF MINERALS
Volume 48, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00269-021-01166-2

Keywords

MnO2 polymorphs; High-temperature transformation; Reaction kinetics; Pyrolusite; Ramsdellite

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry for Education, University and Research through the MIUR-Project PRIN [2017L83S77]

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The two most common polymorphs of MnO2 are often found together in nature, and their transformation process involves two steps with an amorphous phase intermediate. The activation energies of the two forms are comparable, but the pre-exponential factor of the amorphization of ramsdelitte is two orders of magnitude larger than the crystallization of pyrolusite.
The two most common polymorphs of MnO2, ramsdellite and pyrolusite, are often found in natural association. Our starting sample is from the Mistake mine (Arizona) containing macroscopic crystals of both ramsdellite (a = 4.5131(6), b = 9.2689(13), c = 2.8610(4) angstrom, V = 119.69(3) angstrom(3); S.G. Pbmn) and pyrolusite (a = 4.4030(2), c = 2.87392(16) angstrom, V = 55.715(5) angstrom(3); S.G. P4(2)/mnm), along with a smaller amount of groutellite. A mixed powder was used to study the ramsdellite -> pyrolusite transformation by in situ high-temperature X-ray powder diffraction. Our results reveal that this transformation is not a direct transition, but it occurs in two steps, as a function of temperature; ramsdellite transforms into an amorphous phase, which then recrystallizes into pyrolusite. Amorphization of ramsdellite and crystallization of pyrolusite kinetics were studied by the universal equation for solid-solid reactions. The two activation energies are comparable, but the pre-exponential factor of the ramsdellite amorphization is two orders of magnitude larger than pyrolusite crystallization's. As a consequence, ramsdellite -> pyrolusite transformation implies the formation of an amorphous transition, due to a mismatch between the conversion rates, that reaches its maximum at around 630 K and then decreases at higher T, when pyrolusite crystallization is strongly promoted.

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