1 / 25

Silicates (several polymorphs)

Silicates (several polymorphs). SiO 2. Presented by Paul Sandlin. 3 principal crystalline forms - Quartz, tridymite, and cristobalite Sluggish transformation, so high temp forms (cristobalite and tridymite) can exist metastably below their inversion temps

sachi
Download Presentation

Silicates (several polymorphs)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Silicates (several polymorphs) SiO2 Presented by Paul Sandlin

  2. 3 principal crystalline forms - Quartz, tridymite, and cristobalite • Sluggish transformation, so high temp forms (cristobalite and tridymite) can exist metastably below their inversion temps • Each has low and high temp modification designated α and β respectively

  3. Alpha-Quartz

  4. Beta-Quartz

  5. Quartz • Quartz is most to a pure compound • Bachheimer (1980) found evidence for 1st-order transition from α-quartz to intermediate phase at 573°C and 2nd-order transition to β-quartz at 574°C - micro twinning upon cooling high quartz • Only minor atomic adjustments without breaking of Si-O bonds

  6. Quartz Occurrences • Common and abundant • Igneous, metamorphic, sedimentary, pegmatite veins, deposited on sea floor • Mechanically and chemically stable

  7. Orthorhombic-Tridymite

  8. Hexagonal Tridymite

  9. Tridymite monoclinic

  10. Tridymite • When pure quartz is heated, it bypasses tridymite and transforms directly to cristobalite at ~ 1050°C (Mosesman and Pitzer, (1941) - “Mineralizing agent” needed for tridymite formation • Several low-temp polymorphs • Ideally SiO2, but small amounts of Na and Al may be in solid solution • Stable from 870°C to 1470°C

  11. Tridymite occurrences • Typical occurrence is in acid volcanic rocks such as rhyolite, obsidian, trachyte, andesite and dacite. - Often found in cavities of such rocks • ? If it occurs magmatically (“metamorphic”) - pneumatolytic metamorphism • 6 months after Mt. Pelée eruptions

  12. Alpha- Cristobalite

  13. Beta-Cristobalite

  14. Cristobalite • Contains some Na and Al • Low cristobalite structure is tetragonal, whereas high cristobalite is isometric. • Stable from 1470°C to 1728°C (melting point)

  15. Cristobalite occurrences • Typically a mineral of volcanic rocks - may occur in cavities, often in association (metastable) with tridymite • Found in obsidian, rhyolite, trachyte, andesite, dacite, and olivine basalt. • Often a late product of crystallization • Due to the ability to occur as an unstable form outside equilibrium field, time of crystallization is difficult to pinpoint

  16. Coesite

  17. Coesite • Composed of four-membered rings of Si tetrahedra linked at corners to form chains parallel to c. • One Si-O-Si angle constrained to be 180° because this O1 site is located on a center of symmetry • Slight distortion occurs with pressure, and Si2-O2-Si2 angle decreasing from 142.7° to 136.4° at 5.19 GPa (Levien and Prewitt, 1981)

  18. Coesite occurrences • Recently discovered in sheared porous sandstones at Meteor Crater, Arizona • Granite and pumaceous tuff near the rim of the Rieskessel crater, Bavaria - developed by the shock wave generated by meteoritic impact

  19. Stishovite

  20. Stishovite • Prototype phase having octahedrally coordinated silicon • Structural properties at high pressure are highly sensitive to stress (Ross et al., 1990) • More compressible in the a direction than the c direction due to significant Si-Si repulsion across the shared edges of octahedra that form chains in the c direction (Ross et al., 1990) • At ambient conditions, O-O distance of 2.29Å is one of the shortest found in any oxide not containing hydrogen

  21. Stishovite occurrences • High pressure environments - meteoritic impacts

More Related