Magnesite+Hydromag

Magnesite+Hydromag — NIR2,126 points · 400012500 cm⁻¹
400060008000100001200000.02000.04000.06000.08000.100Wavenumber (cm⁻¹)Absorbance

Spectrum Details

Modality
NIR
Category
soil
Material Type
Intimate
Sample ID
HS47.1B, HS47.2B, HS47.3B, HS47.4B
Collection Locality
Victorville, CA
Spectral Purity
1a2_3_4_ # HS47.1B # 1= 0.2-3, 2= 1.5-6, 3= 6-25, 4= 20-150 microns SPECTRAL_PURITY: 1a2_3_4_ # HS47.2B # 1= 0.2-3, 2= 1.5-6, 3= 6-25, 4= 20-150 microns SPECTRAL_PURITY: 1a2a3a4_ # HS47.3B # 1= 0.2-3, 2= 1.5-6, 3= 6-25, 4= 20-150 microns SPECTRAL_PURITY: 1a2_3_4_ # HS47.4B # 1= 0.2-3, 2= 1.5-6, 3= 6-25, 4= 20-150 microns
Composition / XRD
None # XRF, EPMA, ICP(Trace), WChem
Sample Description
Forms series with Gaspeite and with Siderite. Original spectrum published in: Hunt, G.R., J.W. Salisbury, 1971, Visible and near-infrared spectra of minerals and rocks: II. Carbonates. Modern Geology, v. 2, p. 23-30. With the following notes: "Magnesite, MgCO3, is a carbonate mineral commonly found in veins, and derived from the alteration of serpentine. Such magnesites are compact and not recognizably crystalline. Crystalline magnesite is found in sedimentary rocks, where it has formed either by primary precipitation or by alteration of dolomite." "This sample is of the compact, non-crystalline variety. It appears mineralogically pure in hand specimen, but its spectrum displays bands other than those due to the carbonate ion at the longer wavelengths. These bands near 1.4 and 1.9µm are due to water of hydration and so the sample must be, at least in part, composed of hydromagnesite, roughly Mg5(OH)2(CO3)4•4H2O. X-ray diffraction indicates only magnesite, but heating to 800°C shows the presence of 1.78% H2O by weight, confirming the presence of some water of hydration. The water band near 1.9µm precludes observation of the three weaker vibrational bands of the carbonate radical."
XRD Analysis
pure magnesite - Hunt and Salisbury as noted in above sample description. 40 kV - 30 mA, 6.5-9.5 keV Reference: JCPDS #8-479 Found: Member of the calcite group, probably magnesite, plus at least one additional, poorly crystallized phase. Sought but not found: brucite Comment: sharp pattern of crystalline carbonate closely matches the JCPDS card for magnesite. I don't understand why the (012) reflection is missing - but it doesn't appear on the JCPDS card, either. There is a moderately weak, broad peak (doublet) at 21 degrees 2 theta - thus the comment about the additional phase. Could opaline silica be present??" J.S. Huebner, J. Pickrell, and T. Schaefer , 1994, written communication. Magnesite is major phase with minor amount of clay (most likely expandable smectite); no hydromagnetsite was detectable with XRD. B. Benzel. 2016
X Units
cm⁻¹
Y Units
Absorbance
Data Points
2,126

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Attribution

USGS Spectral Library Version 7, U.S. Geological Survey

License: Public Domain

DOI: 10.3133/ds1035

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