The new mineral tomiolloite, Al12(Te4+O3)5[(SO3)0.5(SO4)0.5](OH)24; a unique microporous tellurite structure

Tomiolloite (IMA2021-019) is a new aluminum tellurite sulfite-sulfate mineral discovered at the Bambolla mine, Moctezuma, Sonora, Mexico, a well-known tellurium (Te) mineral locality. Tomiolloite forms roughly spherical clusters of crystals comprised of very thin, needle-like crystals (1 µm diameter...

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Published inThe American mineralogist Vol. 107; no. 12; pp. 2167 - 2175
Main Authors Missen, Owen P, Mills, Stuart J, Rumsey, Michael S, Spratt, John, Najorka, Jens, Kampf, Anthony R, Thorne, Brent
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Washington Mineralogical Society of America 01.12.2022
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
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Summary:Tomiolloite (IMA2021-019) is a new aluminum tellurite sulfite-sulfate mineral discovered at the Bambolla mine, Moctezuma, Sonora, Mexico, a well-known tellurium (Te) mineral locality. Tomiolloite forms roughly spherical clusters of crystals comprised of very thin, needle-like crystals (1 µm diameter, ∼40 µm length) around a core of small, stubbier, broken crystals. Tomiolloite is generally found growing on tellurite or quartz. The strongest powder X-ray diffraction lines are [dobs Å (Iobs) (hkl)]: 11.667 (89) (100), 8.240 (38) (101), 4.107 (29) (202,211,121), 3.223 (100) (203,302,130), and 2.905 (37) (213,123,222,400). The empirical formula of tomiolloite, as determined by electron microprobe analysis, is (Al10.64 Te1.016+ Fe0.313+ Zn0.04)Σ12 (Te5.004+ Pb0.02)Σ5.02 (S0.494+ S0.496+ Si0.02)Σ1.00 O21.53[(OH)20.86 Cl0.11]Σ20.97, which is simplified to the ideal formula Al12(Te4+O3)5[(SO3)0.5(SO4)0.5](OH)24. Significant Te6+ substitution for Al3+ is observed in tomiolloite, verified by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and crystal-structure analysis. The structure of tomiolloite was determined using synchrotron single-crystal X-ray diffraction, showing that tomiolloite is hexagonal and crystallizes in the space-group P63/m, with the unit-cell parameters a=13.3360(19) Å, c=11.604(2) Å, V=1787.3(6) Å3, and Z=2. Tomiolloite has a unique microporous framework structure, which bears a slight similarity to that of zemannite, but it has a much larger cavity diameter (8.85 Å). The framework is built from edge-sharing Mφ6 octahedra (M=Al3+ and Te6+), Te4+O3 trigonal pyramids, and Te4+O4 disphenoids. Mφ6 octahedra edge-share to form crankshaft-shaped chains along c, with Te4+On polyhedra filling notches in the crankshafts and providing linkages between adjacent chains. The framework has an overall positive charge, which is balanced by the presence of both sulfite (SO32-) trigonal pyramids and sulfate (SO42-) tetrahedra in the channels.
ISSN:0003-004X
1945-3027
DOI:10.2138/am-2022-8368