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Kegginite

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Kegginite
General
CategoryPhosphate
Formula
(repeating unit)
Pb3Ca3 [ AsV12O40(VO) ] * 20 H2O
IMA symbolKgn
Strunz classification8.FD.10
Crystal systemTrigonal
Crystal class3 - Pyramidal
Unit cella = 14.936 Å,
c = 15.846 Å;
Identification
ColorOrange-Red
CleavageDistinct/Good on {001}
FractureIrregular/Uneven
TenacityBrittle
Mohs scale hardness2
LusterVitreous
StreakPinkish - Orange
Density2.69 g/cm3
Optical propertiesUniaxial
Refractive indexnα= 2.035 nβ= 2.040 nγ= 2.085
PleochroismVisible
Ultraviolet fluorescenceNot Fluorescent
SolubilityInsoluble in H2O and soluble at room temperature in HCl
References[1][2][3]

Kegginite is a phosphate mineral discovered in Packrat mine near Gateway, Colorado. This specific mineral is very rare, and has only been found in one specific level of the Packrat mine. Kegginite is named as such due to the presence of the ε-isomer of the Keggin anion as the basis of the structural unit.[1] It also recognizes the work of J.F. Keggin[3] who first experimentally described the structure of the α-Keggin anions in 1934. At the time of its discovery it represented a new crystal structure type and was the first mineral discovered with a vanadyl-containing polyoxometalate anion.[2]

Physical and optical properties

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Crystals of kegginite are orange-red hexagonal tablets. The crystals are transparent vitreous and have a pinkish-orange streak. Kegginite is non-fluorescent in long wave and short wave ultraviolet light. It exhibits a 2 on the Mohs Scale of Hardness, with brittle tenacity, irregular fracture, and good cleavage on {001}. Due to the very limited amount of crystals available, their size, and dark color make it impossible to obtain reliable measurements of the indices of refraction.[1]

Chemical analysis

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Oxide wt% Range
PbO 26.82 26.98-29.27
CaO 5.39 5.59-5.75
MgO 0.92 0.93-0.99
V2O5 47.87 49.01-51.30
As2O5 4.42 4.38-4.80
H2O 14.59
Total 100.01

[1]

Occurrence

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Kegginite has been found in the main tunnel level of the Packrat mine, near Gateway, Mesa County, Colorado, U.S.A. The Packrat Mine is near the northern end of the Uravan Mineral Belt.[1] Kegginite is very rare, it has been found sparingly on only a few small samples but often in association with ansermetite, gypsum, mesaite, and sherwoodite. Kegginite forms from the oxidation of montroseite-corvusite assembleges in moist environments.[1]

Structure

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Due to the high amounts of H2O contained within Kegginite, it defracts relatively weakly leading to being limited to 2θ < 40°.[1] However, a defined structure has been identified and is broken into two distinct parts, a structural unit and an interstitial complex. The structural unit is a heteropolyanion composed of 12 distorted VO6 octahedra surrounding a central AsO4 (arsenate) tetrahedron and capped by a VO4 (vanadate) tetrahedron, which shares three of its four vertices with the VO6 octahedra. Without the capping tetrahedron, the heteropolyanion is the ε-isomer of the Keggin anion. The formula of the interstitial unit is [Pb3Ca3·20H2O]12+. The Pb site is located above each of the remaining cavities located in the mono-capped Keggin anion.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Anthony R. Kampf, John M. Hughes, Barbara P. Nash, and Joe Marty (2017) Kegginite, a new mineral with a novel ε-isomer of the Keggin anion. American Mineralogist, Volume 102, pages 461-465.
  2. ^ a b https://mindat.org/min-47606.html
  3. ^ a b Kondinski, A., Parac-Vogt, T. N., 2018, Keggin Structure, Quō Vādis?, Frontiers in Chemistry, v 6, https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fchem.2018.00346