Author:
Mills Stuart J.,Kolitsch Uwe,Favreau Georges,Birch William D.,Galea-Clolus Valérie,Henrich Johannes Markus
Abstract
Abstract. The new mineral gobelinite, ideally
CoCu4(SO4)2(OH)6⚫6H2O, is a new member of
the ktenasite group and the Co analogue of ktenasite,
ZnCu4(SO4)2(OH)6⚫6H2O. It occurs at Cap
Garonne (CG), Var, France (type locality), and Eisenzecher Zug (EZ),
Siegerland, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany (cotype locality). The mineral
forms pale green, bluish green or greyish green, blocky to thin, lath-like
crystals. They are transparent and non-fluorescent, with a vitreous,
sometimes also pearly, lustre and a white streak having a pale-green cast.
Mohs hardness is about 2.5. The crystals are brittle with an irregular
fracture; no cleavage was observed. D(meas.) is 2.95(2) and D(calc.) is 2.907 g cm−3 (for empirical formula, CG). Common associates are brochantite
and various other hydrated metal sulfates. Electron-microprobe analyses of
the CG material yielded (wt. %) CuO 42.45, CoO 6.58, NiO 3.37, ZnO 3.14,
SO3 22.12, and H2O 22.62 (calculated on structural grounds), and total = 100.30 wt. %, giving the empirical formula (based on 20 O atoms)
(Co0.63Ni0.32Zn0.28Cu3.83)Σ5.06S1.98O20H18.00. The simplified formula is
(Co,Ni)(Cu,Zn)4(SO4)2(OH)6⚫6H2O, and the endmember formula is CoCu4(SO4)2(OH)6⚫6H2O. Scanning electron microscopy–energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (SEM–EDS) analyses of the (Zn-free) EZ material gave the
simplified average formula
(Co0.92Ni0.21Mg0.01Cu3.79)Σ4.93(SO4)2.08(OH)6⚫6H2O. Optically,
gobelinite (CG) is biaxial negative, with α=1.576(2), β=1.617(2) and γ=1.630(2); 2Vmeas=58(4)∘ and
2Vcalc=57.5∘. Dispersion is weak, r>v;
orientation is X=β, Y=γ and Z≈α, with
strong pleochroism X equaling colourless, Y equaling green and Z equaling pale green. The
mineral is monoclinic, space group P21∕c, with a=5.599(1), b=6.084(1), c=23.676(5) Å, β=95.22(3)∘ and V=803.2(3) Å3 (at 100 K; CG) and a=5.611(1), b=6.103(1), c=23.808(5) Å, β=95.18(3)∘ and V=811.9(3) Å3 (at 298 K; EZ), respectively (Z=2). The eight strongest
measured powder X-ray diffraction lines (d in Å (I) hkl (CG material)) are
11.870 (100) 002, 5.924 (40) 004, 4.883 (10) 102, 4.825 (15) 013, 3.946 (15)
006, 2.956 (15) 008, 2.663 (20) 202 and 2.561 (15) 1‾23. Single-crystal
structure determinations gave R1=0.0310 (CG) and 0.0280 (EZ). The
atomic arrangement is based on brucite-like sheets formed from edge-sharing,
Jahn–Teller-distorted (4+2 coordination) CuO6 octahedra. These
sheets are decorated on both sides with SO4 tetrahedra and linked via
hydrogen bonds to interstitial, fairly regular Co(H2O)6 octahedra.
The name alludes to the Old French word gobelin, equivalent to the German word
kobold, from which the designation of the element cobalt was derived.
Funder
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Austrian Science Fund
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