Abstract
Summary
Biphosphammite,
NH4H2PO4,
recorded once as secondary powder in 1870, occurs
with bat guano in Murra-el-elevyn cave, 31° 20′
S., 126° 0′ E., Western Australia.
The mineral occurs as tapering tetragonal
prisms with pyramidal terminations, which are
colourless to light buff, very soft, water
soluble, contain fine syngenite inclusions, and
have D 2·04, ω 1·525,
ε 1·480 Space group.
,
a 7·4935 Å,
c 7·340 Å, six
strongest powder X-ray lines 3·75 Å (10) 200; 5·24
Å (9) 101; 3·02 Å (9) 112; 1·993 Å (8) 312,213;
2·65 Å (7) 220; 2·368 Å (7) 310,301. Partial
analysis of purest available material gave:
P2O5
51·1, K2O 14·2,
(NH4)2O
12·3, SO2 5·59,
Na2O 0·16, water-insolubles
0·81 per cent, remainder mainly CaO and
H2O. Calculated mineral
content is 88 % biphosphammite (62 %
NH4H2PO4,
38% isomorphous
KH2PO4),
11·5% syngenite, insolubles 0·81 % calc. total
100·3 per cent.
Material proposed to be neotype is
preserved at the Government Chemical Laboratories,
Perth, Western Australia.
Subject
Geochemistry and Petrology
Cited by
10 articles.
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