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Grey, I. E., Betterton, J., Kampf, A. R., Macrae, C. M., Shanks, F. L., Price, J. R. (2016) Penberthycroftite, [Al6(AsO4)3(OH)9(H2O)5]·8H2O, a second new hydrated aluminium arsenate mineral from the Penberthy Croft mine, St. Hilary, Cornwall, UK. Mineralogical Magazine, 80 (7) 1149-1160 doi:10.1180/minmag.2016.080.069

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Reference TypeJournal (article/letter/editorial)
TitlePenberthycroftite, [Al6(AsO4)3(OH)9(H2O)5]·8H2O, a second new hydrated aluminium arsenate mineral from the Penberthy Croft mine, St. Hilary, Cornwall, UK
JournalMineralogical Magazine
AuthorsGrey, I. E.Author
Betterton, J.Author
Kampf, A. R.Author
Macrae, C. M.Author
Shanks, F. L.Author
Price, J. R.Author
Year2016 (December)Volume80
Issue7
PublisherMineralogical Society
Download URLhttps://rruff.info/rruff_1.0/uploads/MM80_1149.pdf+
DOIdoi:10.1180/minmag.2016.080.069Search in ResearchGate
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Mindat Ref. ID244846Long-form Identifiermindat:1:5:244846:0
GUID0
Full ReferenceGrey, I. E., Betterton, J., Kampf, A. R., Macrae, C. M., Shanks, F. L., Price, J. R. (2016) Penberthycroftite, [Al6(AsO4)3(OH)9(H2O)5]·8H2O, a second new hydrated aluminium arsenate mineral from the Penberthy Croft mine, St. Hilary, Cornwall, UK. Mineralogical Magazine, 80 (7) 1149-1160 doi:10.1180/minmag.2016.080.069
Plain TextGrey, I. E., Betterton, J., Kampf, A. R., Macrae, C. M., Shanks, F. L., Price, J. R. (2016) Penberthycroftite, [Al6(AsO4)3(OH)9(H2O)5]·8H2O, a second new hydrated aluminium arsenate mineral from the Penberthy Croft mine, St. Hilary, Cornwall, UK. Mineralogical Magazine, 80 (7) 1149-1160 doi:10.1180/minmag.2016.080.069
Abstract/NotesPenberthycroftite, ideally [Al6(AsO4)3(OH)9(H2O)5]·8H2O, is a new secondary aluminium arsenate mineral from the Penberthy Croft mine, St. Hilary, Cornwall, England, UK. It occurs as tufts of white, ultrathin (sub-micrometre) rectangular laths, with lateral dimensions generally < 20 μm. The laths are flattened on {010} and elongated on [100]. The mineral is associated with arsenopyrite, bettertonite, bulachite, cassiterite, chalcopyrite, chamosite, goethite, liskeardite, pharmacoalumite–pharmacosiderite and quartz. Penberthycroftite is translucent with a white streak and a vitreous to pearly lustre. The calculated density is 2.18 g/cm3. Optically, only the lower and upper refractive indices could be measured, 1.520(1) and 1.532(1) respectively. No pleochroism was observed. Electron microprobe analyses (average of 14) with H2O obtained from thermogravimetric analysis and analyses normalized to 100% gave Al2O3 = 31.3, Fe2O3 = 0.35, As2O5 = 34.1, SO3 = 2.15 and H2O = 32.1. The empirical formula, based on nine metal atoms and 26 framework anions is [Al5.96Fe0.04(As0.97Al0.03O4)3(SO4)0.26(OH)8.30(H2O)5.44](H2O)7.8, corresponding to the ideal formula [Al6(AsO4)3(OH)9(H2O)5]·8H2O. Penberthycroftite is monoclinic, space group P21/c with unit-cell dimensions (100 K): a = 7.753(2) Å, b = 24.679(5) Å, c = 15.679(3) Å and β = 94.19(3)°. The strongest lines in the powder X-ray diffraction pattern are [dobs in Å(I) (hkl)] 13.264(46) (011); 12.402(16)(020); 9.732(100)(021); 7.420(28)(110); 5.670(8)(130); 5.423(6)(1̄31). The structure of penberthycroftite was solved using synchrotron single-crystal diffraction data and refined to wRobs = 0.059 for 1639 observed (I> 3σ(I)) reflections. Penberthycroftite has a heteropolyhedral layer structure, with the layers parallel to {010}. The layers are strongly undulating and their stacking produces large channels along [100] that are filled with water molecules. The layers are identical to those in bettertonite, but they are displaced relative to one another along [001] and [010] such that the interlayer volume is decreased markedly (by ∼10%)relative to that in bettertonite, with a corresponding reduction in the interlayer water content from 11 H2O per formula unit (pfu) in bettertonite to 8 H2O pfu in penberthycroftite.

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Penberthy Croft Mine, St Hilary, Cornwall, England, UK

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Penberthycroftite

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LocalityMineral(s)
Penberthy Croft Mine, St Hilary, Cornwall, England, UK Bulachite, Goethite, Orthoclase, Penberthycroftite


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