Home Thermodynamic and crystallographic properties of kornelite [Fe2(SO4)3·~7.75H2O] and paracoquimbite [Fe2(SO4)3·9H2O]
Article
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

Thermodynamic and crystallographic properties of kornelite [Fe2(SO4)3·~7.75H2O] and paracoquimbite [Fe2(SO4)3·9H2O]

  • Sonia Ackermann , Biljana Lazic , Thomas Armbruster , Stephen Doyle , Klaus-Dieter Grevel and Juraj Majzlan EMAIL logo
Published/Copyright: April 1, 2015
Become an author with De Gruyter Brill

Abstract

Enthalpies of formation of kornelite [Fe2(SO4)3·~7.75H2O] and paracoquimbite [Fe2(SO4)3·9H2O] were measured by acid (5 N HCl) solution calorimetry at T = 298.15 K. The samples were characterized chemically by an electron microprobe, and structurally by the means of single-crystal, in-house powder, and synchrotron powder X-ray diffraction. The refined structures for the two phases are provided, including estimates of the positions and concentration of non-stoichiometric water in structural channels of kornelite, location of the hydrogen atoms and the hydrogen bonding system in this phase. The measured enthalpies of formation from the elements (crystalline Fe, orthorhombic S, ideal gases O2 and H2) at T = 298.15 K are -4916.2 ± 4.2 kJ/mol for kornelite and -5295.4 ± 4.2 kJ/mol for paracoquimbite. We have used several algorithms to estimate the standard entropy of the two phases. Afterward, we calculated their Gibbs free energy of formation and constructed a phase diagram for kornelite, paracoquimbite, Fe2(SO4)3·5H2O, and Fe2(SO4)3 as a function of temperature and relative humidity of air. The topology of the phase diagram is very sensitive to the entropy estimates and the construction of a reliable phase diagram must await better constraints on entropy or Gibbs free energy of formation. Possible remedies of these problems are also discussed

Received: 2008-12-22
Accepted: 2009-7-20
Published Online: 2015-4-1
Published in Print: 2009-11-1

© 2015 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Review Paper. Microbe-clay mineral interactions
  2. Chemical substitutions, paragenetic relations, and physical conditions of formation of högbomite in the Sittampundi layered anorthosite complex, South India
  3. Miguelromeroite, the Mn analogue of sainfeldite, and redefinition of villyaellenite as an ordered intermediate in the sainfeldite-miguelromeroite series
  4. Mechanism and kinetics of a mineral transformation under hydrothermal conditions: Calaverite to metallic gold
  5. A statistical reassessment of the evidence for the racemic distribution of quartz enantiomorphs
  6. On the crystal structure and crystal chemistry of pollucite, (Cs,Na)16Al16Si32O96·nH2O: A natural microporous material of interest in nuclear technology
  7. The effect of fluid inclusion size on determination of homogenization temperature and density of liquid-rich aqueous inclusions
  8. Effect of SiO2, total FeO, Fe3+/Fe2+, and alkali elements in basaltic glasses on mid-infrared
  9. Influence of cation size on the low-temperature heat capacity of alkaline earth metasilicate glasses
  10. The high-pressure–high-temperature behavior of bassanite
  11. Geochemistry of reversible hydratable tephra from the Trans Mexican Volcanic Belt
  12. Physical contradictions and remedies using simple polythermal equations of state
  13. Thermodynamic and crystallographic properties of kornelite [Fe2(SO4)3·~7.75H2O] and paracoquimbite [Fe2(SO4)3·9H2O]
  14. Humidity-induced phase transitions of ferric sulfate minerals studied by in situ and ex situ X-ray diffraction
  15. In situ Raman spectroscopy of MgSiO3 enstatite up to 1550 K
  16. Optical spectroscopic study of tetrahedrally coordinated Co2+ in natural spinel and staurolite at different temperatures and pressures
  17. New insights into smectite illitization: A zoned K-bentonite revisited
  18. The hydrothermal conversion of kaolinite to kalsilite: Influence of time, temperature, and pH
  19. Sideronatrite, Na2Fe(SO4)2(OH)·3H2O: Crystal structure of the orthorhombic polytype and OD character analysis
  20. Anharmonic OH vibrations in brucite: Small pressure-induced redshift in the range 0–22 GPa
  21. Structural properties of biologically controlled hydrozincite: An HRTEM and NMR spectroscopic study
  22. Mechanism of wollastonite carbonation deduced from micro- to nanometer length scale observations
  23. Letter. Crystal structure of argentopyrite, AgFe2S3, and its relationship with cubanite
  24. Letter. Magnetite-free, yellow lizardite serpentinization of olivine websterite, Canyon Mountain complex, N.E. Oregon
  25. Letter. The influence of atomic size and charge of dissolved species on the diffusivity and viscosity of silicate melts
  26. Letter. Si-Al distribution in high-pressure CaAl4Si2O11 phase: A 29Si and 27Al NMR study
Downloaded on 23.9.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.2138/am.2009.3179/html?lang=en
Scroll to top button