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Extraordinary structural complexity of ilmajokite: a multilevel hierarchical framework structure of natural origin.


ABSTRACT: The crystal structure of ilmajokite, a rare Na-K-Ba-Ce-titanosilicate from the Khibiny mountains, Kola peninsula, Russia, has been solved using single-crystal X-ray diffraction data. The crystal structure is based on a 3D titanosilicate framework consisting of trigonal prismatic titanosilicate (TPTS) clusters centered by Ce3+ in [9]-coordination. Four adjacent TPTS clusters are linked into four-membered rings within the (010) plane and connected via ribbons parallel to 101. The ribbons are organized into layers parallel to (010) and modulated along the a axis with a modulation wavelength of csin? = 32.91?Å and an amplitude of ?b/2 = 13.89?Å. The layers are linked by additional silicate tetrahedra. Na+, K+, Ba2+ and H2O groups occur in the framework cavities and have different occupancies and coordination environments. The crystal structure of ilmajokite can be separated into eight hierarchical levels: atoms, coordination polyhedra, TPTS clusters, rings, ribbons, layers, the framework and the whole structure. The information-based analysis allows estimation of the complexity of the structure as 8.468 bits per atom and 11990.129 bits per cell. According to this analysis, ilmajokite is the third-most complex mineral known to date after ewingite and morrisonite, and is the most complex mineral framework structure, comparable in complexity to paulingite-(Ca) (11?590.532 bits per cell).

SUBMITTER: Zolotarev AA 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6949600 | biostudies-literature | 2020 Jan

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Extraordinary structural complexity of ilmajokite: a multilevel hierarchical framework structure of natural origin.

Zolotarev Andrey A AA   Krivovichev Sergey V SV   Cámara Fernando F   Bindi Luca L   Zhitova Elena S ES   Hawthorne Frank F   Sokolova Elena E  

IUCrJ 20200101 Pt 1


The crystal structure of ilmajokite, a rare Na-K-Ba-Ce-titanosilicate from the Khibiny mountains, Kola peninsula, Russia, has been solved using single-crystal X-ray diffraction data. The crystal structure is based on a 3D titanosilicate framework consisting of trigonal prismatic titanosilicate (TPTS) clusters centered by Ce<sup>3+</sup> in [9]-coordination. Four adjacent TPTS clusters are linked into four-membered rings within the (010) plane and connected <i>via</i> ribbons parallel to 101. The  ...[more]

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