4.3 Article

Description and crystal structure of bobkingite, Cu52+Cl2(OH)8(H2O)2, a new mineral from New Cliffe Hill Quarry, Stanton-under-Bardon, Leicestershire, UK

Journal

MINERALOGICAL MAGAZINE
Volume 66, Issue 2, Pages 301-311

Publisher

MINERALOGICAL SOCIETY
DOI: 10.1180/0026461026620030

Keywords

bobkingite; new mineral; chemical analysis; crystal structure; pentacopper dichloride octahydroxyl-dihydrate; Cu-2(OH)(3)Cl polymorphs; Leicestershire; England

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Bobkingite, ideally Cu-5(2-)'Cl-2(OH)(8)(H2O)(2), is a new mineral from the New Cliffe Hill Quarry, Stanton-under-Bardon, Leicestershire, England. It occurs as very thin (less than or equal to5 mum) transparent plates up to 0.2 mm across. perched on a compact fibrous crust of malachite and crystalline azurite attached to massive cupite. Crystals are tabular on {001} with dominant {001} and minor {100} and {110}. Bobkingite is a soft pate blue colour with a pale-blue streak vitreous lustre and no observable fluorescence under ultraviolet light. It has perfect {001} and fair {100} cleavages, no observable parting, conchoidal fracture. and is brittle, Its Mohs' hardness is 3 and the calculated density is 3.254 g/cm(3). Bobkingite is biaxial negative, with alpha = 1.724(2), beta = 1.745 (2). gamma = 1.750(2), 2V(gammameas) 33(6) 2V(eale) = 52degrees, pleochroism distinct. X = very pale blue, Z = pale greenish blue, X a = 22 (in beta obtuse). Y = c, Z = b. Boblkingite is monoclinic, space group C2m, unit-cell parameters (refined front powder data): a = 10.301(8), b = 6.758(3), 8.835(7) Angstrom, beta = 111.53(6). V 572.1(7) Angstrom(3), Z = 2. The seven strongest lines in the X-ray powder-diffraction pattern are [d (Angstrom), l, (hkl)]: 8.199, 100 (001): 5,502, 100. (110): 5.029, 40. (201): 2.883 80, (3 10) 2.693. 40 (113) 2.263 40, (113). (403) 2.188. 50 (223). Chemical analysis by electron microprobe and crystal-structure solution and refinement gave CuO 70.46. Cl 12.71 H2O 19.19, O drop Cl -2.87. sum 99.49 wt.% where the amount of H2O was determined by crystal-structure analysis. The resulting empirical formula on the basis of 12 anions (including 8 (OH) and 2H(2)O) is Cu4.99Cl2.02O10H12. The crystal structure was solved by direct methods and refined to an R index of 2.6% for 638 observed reflections measured with X-rays on a single crystal. Three distinct (Cuphi(6)) (phi = unspecified anion) octahedra share edge,, to form a framework that is related to the structures of paratacamite and the Cu-2(OH)(3)Cl polymorphs. atacamite and clinoatacamite. The mineral is named for Robert King. formerly of the Department of Geology, Leicester University, prominent mineral collector and founding member of the Russell Society, The mineral and its name hake been approved by the Commission on New Minerals and Mineral Names of the International Mineralogical Association.

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