Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement =. Nesosilicates – SiO 4 4- Sorosilicates – Si 2 O 7...

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Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement =

Transcript of Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement =. Nesosilicates – SiO 4 4- Sorosilicates – Si 2 O 7...

Page 1: Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement =. Nesosilicates – SiO 4 4- Sorosilicates – Si 2 O 7 6- Cyclosilicates – Si 6 O 18 12- Inosilicates (single) – Si.

Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement

=

Page 2: Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement =. Nesosilicates – SiO 4 4- Sorosilicates – Si 2 O 7 6- Cyclosilicates – Si 6 O 18 12- Inosilicates (single) – Si.

Nesosilicates – SiO4

4-

Sorosilicates– Si2O7

6-

Cyclosilicates – Si6O18

12-

Inosilicates (single) – Si2O6

4-

Inosilicates (double) – Si4O11

6-

Phyllosilicates – Si2O5

2-

Tectosilicates – SiO2

0

Page 3: Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement =. Nesosilicates – SiO 4 4- Sorosilicates – Si 2 O 7 6- Cyclosilicates – Si 6 O 18 12- Inosilicates (single) – Si.

Pauling’s Rules for ionic structures

1. Radius Ratio Principle – • cation-anion distance can be calculated from

their effective ionic radii• cation coordination depends on relative radii

between cations and surrounding anions• Geometrical calculations reveal ideal Rc/Ra ratios

for selected coordination numbers• Larger cation/anion ratio yields higher C.N. as

C.N. increases, space between anions increases and larger cations can fit

• Stretching a polyhedra to fit a larger cation is possible

Page 4: Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement =. Nesosilicates – SiO 4 4- Sorosilicates – Si 2 O 7 6- Cyclosilicates – Si 6 O 18 12- Inosilicates (single) – Si.

Pauling’s Rules for ionic structures2. Electrostatic Valency Principle

– Bond strength = ion valence / C.N.– Sum of bonds to an ion = charge on that ion– Relative bond strengths in a mineral containing

>2 different ions:• Isodesmic – all bonds have same relative strength• Anisodesmic – strength of one bond much stronger

than others – simplify much stronger part to be an anionic entity (SO4

2-, NO3-, CO3

2-)• Mesodesmic – cation-anion bond strength =

½ charge, meaning identical bond strength available for further bonding to cation or other anion

Page 5: Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement =. Nesosilicates – SiO 4 4- Sorosilicates – Si 2 O 7 6- Cyclosilicates – Si 6 O 18 12- Inosilicates (single) – Si.

Bond strength – Pauling’s 2nd Rule

Si4+

Bond Strength = 4 (charge)/4(C.N.) = 1

Bond Strength of Si = ½ the charge of O2-

O2- has strength (charge) to attract either anotherSi or a different cation – if it attaches to another Si, the bonds between either Si will be identical

O2-Si4+ Si4+O2-

Page 6: Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement =. Nesosilicates – SiO 4 4- Sorosilicates – Si 2 O 7 6- Cyclosilicates – Si 6 O 18 12- Inosilicates (single) – Si.

Mesodesmic subunit – SiO44-

• Each Si-O bond has strength of 1

• This is ½ the charge of O2-

• O2- then can make an equivalent bond to cations or to another Si4+ (two Si4+ then share an O)

• Reason silicate can easily polymerize to form a number of different structural configurations (and why silicates are hard)

Page 7: Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement =. Nesosilicates – SiO 4 4- Sorosilicates – Si 2 O 7 6- Cyclosilicates – Si 6 O 18 12- Inosilicates (single) – Si.

Pauling’s Rules for ionic structures

3. Sharing of edges or faces by coordinating polyhedra is inherently unstable– This puts cations closer together and they will

repel each other

Page 8: Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement =. Nesosilicates – SiO 4 4- Sorosilicates – Si 2 O 7 6- Cyclosilicates – Si 6 O 18 12- Inosilicates (single) – Si.

Pauling’s Rules for ionic structures

4. Cations of high charge do not share anions easily with other cations due to high degree of repulsion

5. Principle of Parsimony – Atomic structures tend to be composed of only a few distinct components – they are simple, with only a few types of ions and bonds.

Page 9: Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement =. Nesosilicates – SiO 4 4- Sorosilicates – Si 2 O 7 6- Cyclosilicates – Si 6 O 18 12- Inosilicates (single) – Si.

Problem:

• A melt or water solution that a mineral precipitates from contains ALL natural elements

• Question: Do any of these ‘other’ ions get in?

Page 10: Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement =. Nesosilicates – SiO 4 4- Sorosilicates – Si 2 O 7 6- Cyclosilicates – Si 6 O 18 12- Inosilicates (single) – Si.

Chemical ‘fingerprints’ of minerals

• Major, minor, and trace constituents in a mineral

• Stable isotopic signatures

• Radioactive isotope signatures

Page 11: Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement =. Nesosilicates – SiO 4 4- Sorosilicates – Si 2 O 7 6- Cyclosilicates – Si 6 O 18 12- Inosilicates (single) – Si.

Major, minor, and trace constituents in a mineral

• A handsample-size rock or mineral has around 5*1024 atoms in it – theoretically almost every known element is somewhere in that rock, most in concentrations too small to measure…

• Specific chemical composition of any mineral is a record of the melt or solution it precipitated from. Exact chemical composition of any mineral is a fingerprint, or a genetic record, much like your own DNA

• This composition may be further affected by other processes

• Can indicate provenance (origin), and from looking at changes in chemistry across adjacant/similar units - rate of precipitation/ crystallization, melt history, fluid history

Page 12: Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement =. Nesosilicates – SiO 4 4- Sorosilicates – Si 2 O 7 6- Cyclosilicates – Si 6 O 18 12- Inosilicates (single) – Si.

Minor, trace elements

• Because a lot of different ions get into any mineral’s structure as minor or trace impurities, strictly speaking, a formula could look like:

• Ca0.004Mg1.859Fe0.158Mn0.003Al0.006Zn0.002Cu0.001Pb0.000

01Si0.0985Se0.002O4

• One of the ions is a determined integer, the other numbers are all reported relative to that one.

Page 13: Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement =. Nesosilicates – SiO 4 4- Sorosilicates – Si 2 O 7 6- Cyclosilicates – Si 6 O 18 12- Inosilicates (single) – Si.

Stable Isotopes• A number of elements have more than one naturally

occuring stable isotope.– Why atomic mass numbers are not whole they

represent the relative fractions of naturally occurring stable isotopes

• Any reaction involving one of these isotopes can have a fractionation – where one isotope is favored over another

• Studying this fractionation yields information about the interaction of water and a mineral/rock, the origin of O in minerals, rates of weathering, climate history, and details of magma evolution, among other processes

Page 14: Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement =. Nesosilicates – SiO 4 4- Sorosilicates – Si 2 O 7 6- Cyclosilicates – Si 6 O 18 12- Inosilicates (single) – Si.

Radioactive Isotopes• Many elements also have 1+ radioactive isotopes• A radioactive isotope is inherently unstable and

through radiactive decay, turns into other isotopes (a string of these reactions is a decay chain)

• The rates of each decay are variable – some are extremely slow

• If a system is closed (no elements escape) then the proportion of parent (original) and daughter (product of a radioactive decay reaction) can yield a date.

• Radioactive isotopes are also used to study petrogenesis, weathering rates, water/rock interaction, among other processes

Page 15: Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement =. Nesosilicates – SiO 4 4- Sorosilicates – Si 2 O 7 6- Cyclosilicates – Si 6 O 18 12- Inosilicates (single) – Si.

Chemical Formulas

• Subscripts represent relative numbers of elements present

• (Parentheses) separate complexes or substituted elements– Fe(OH)3 – Fe bonded to 3 separate OH

groups

– (Mg, Fe)SiO4 – Olivine group – mineral composed of 0-100 % of Mg, 100-Mg% Fe

Page 16: Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement =. Nesosilicates – SiO 4 4- Sorosilicates – Si 2 O 7 6- Cyclosilicates – Si 6 O 18 12- Inosilicates (single) – Si.

Stoichiometry• Some minerals contain varying amounts of

2+ elements which substitute for each other

• Solid solution – elements substitute in the mineral structure on a sliding scale, defined in terms of the end members – species which contain 100% of one of the elements

Page 17: Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement =. Nesosilicates – SiO 4 4- Sorosilicates – Si 2 O 7 6- Cyclosilicates – Si 6 O 18 12- Inosilicates (single) – Si.

Chemical heterogeneity

• Matrix containing ions a mineral forms in contains many different ions/elements – sometimes they get into the mineral

• Ease with which they do this:– Solid solution: ions which substitute easily form

a series of minerals with varying compositions (olivine series how easily Mg (forsterite) and Fe (fayalite) swap…)

– Impurity defect: ions of lower quantity or that have a harder time swapping get into the structure

Page 18: Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement =. Nesosilicates – SiO 4 4- Sorosilicates – Si 2 O 7 6- Cyclosilicates – Si 6 O 18 12- Inosilicates (single) – Si.

Compositional diagrams

Fe O

FeOwustite

Fe3O4

magnetiteFe2O3

hematite

A1B1C1

xA1B2C3

A

CB

x

Page 19: Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement =. Nesosilicates – SiO 4 4- Sorosilicates – Si 2 O 7 6- Cyclosilicates – Si 6 O 18 12- Inosilicates (single) – Si.

Fe Mg

Si

fayalite forsterite

enstatite ferrosilite

Pyroxene solid solution MgSiO3 – FeSiO3

Olivine solid solution Mg2SiO4 – Fe2SiO4

Fe Mg

forsteritefayalite

Page 20: Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement =. Nesosilicates – SiO 4 4- Sorosilicates – Si 2 O 7 6- Cyclosilicates – Si 6 O 18 12- Inosilicates (single) – Si.

• KMg3(AlSi3O10)(OH)2 - phlogopite

• K(Li,Al)2-3(AlSi3O10)(OH)2 – lepidolite

• KAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2 – muscovite

• Amphiboles:

• Ca2Mg5Si8O22(OH)2 – tremolite

• Ca2(Mg,Fe)5Si8O22(OH)2 –actinolite

• (K,Na)0-1(Ca,Na,Fe,Mg)2(Mg,Fe,Al)5(Si,Al)8O22(OH)2 - Hornblende

Actinolite series minerals

Page 21: Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement =. Nesosilicates – SiO 4 4- Sorosilicates – Si 2 O 7 6- Cyclosilicates – Si 6 O 18 12- Inosilicates (single) – Si.

Normalization• Analyses of a mineral or rock can be reported in

different ways:– Element weight %- Analysis yields x grams element in

100 grams sample– Oxide weight % because most analyses of minerals and

rocks do not include oxygen, and because oxygen is usually the dominant anion - assume that charge imbalance from all known cations is balanced by some % of oxygen

– Number of atoms – need to establish in order to get to a mineral’s chemical formula

• Technique of relating all ions to one (often Oxygen) is called normalization

Page 22: Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement =. Nesosilicates – SiO 4 4- Sorosilicates – Si 2 O 7 6- Cyclosilicates – Si 6 O 18 12- Inosilicates (single) – Si.

Normalization• Be able to convert between element weight

%, oxide weight %, and # of atoms• What do you need to know in order convert

these?– Element’s weight atomic mass (Si=28.09

g/mol; O=15.99 g/mol; SiO2=60.08 g/mol)– Original analysis– Convention for relative oxides (SiO2, Al2O3, Fe2O3

etc) based on charge neutrality of complex with oxygen (using dominant redox species)

Page 23: Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement =. Nesosilicates – SiO 4 4- Sorosilicates – Si 2 O 7 6- Cyclosilicates – Si 6 O 18 12- Inosilicates (single) – Si.

Normalization example

• Start with data from quantitative analysis: weight percent of oxide in the mineral

• Convert this to moles of oxide per 100 g of sample by dividing oxide weight percent by the oxide’s molecular weight

• ‘Fudge factor’ from Perkins Box 1.5, pg 22: is process called normalization – where we divide the number of moles of one thing by the total moles all species/oxides then are presented relative to one another

Page 24: Another ‘picture’ of atom arrangement =. Nesosilicates – SiO 4 4- Sorosilicates – Si 2 O 7 6- Cyclosilicates – Si 6 O 18 12- Inosilicates (single) – Si.

Feldspar analysis(Ca, Na, K)1(Fe, Al, Si)4O8

oxide

Atomic weight

of oxide (g/mol)

# cations in oxide

# of O2-

in oxide

Oxide wt % in the

mineral (determined by analysis)

# of moles of oxide in

the mineral

mole % of oxides in

the mineral Cation

moles of cations

in sample

moles of O2-

contributed by each cation

Number of moles of ion in the mineral

SiO2 60.08 1 2 65.90 1.09687 73.83 Si4+73.83 147.66 2.95

Al2O3 101.96 2 3 19.45 0.19076 12.84 Al3+25.68 38.52 1.03

Fe2O3 159.68 2 3 1.03 0.00645 0.43 Fe3+ 0.87 1.30 0.03CaO 56.08 1 1 0.61 0.01088 0.73 Ca2+ 0.73 0.73 0.03Na2O 61.96 2 1 7.12 0.11491 7.73 Na+ 15.47 7.73 0.62

K2O 94.20 2 1 6.20 0.06582 4.43 K+ 8.86 4.43 0.35

SUM 1.48569 100 125.44 200.38

# of moles Oxygen choosen: 8

Ca0.73Na15.47K8.86Fe0.87Al25.68Si73.83O200.38

Ca0.03Na0.62K0.35Fe0.03Al1.03Si2.95O8

to get here from formula above, adjust by 8 / 200.38