Abstract

AbstractGuite (IMA2017-080), Co3O4, is a new mineral species and an important economic mineral found in the Sicomines copper-cobalt mine, located ~11 km southwest of Kolwezi City, Democratic Republic of Congo. The mineral occurs as a granular agglomerate, 50 to 500 μm in size, and is associated closely with heterogenite in a quartz matrix. Guite is opaque, has a dark grey colour with metallic lustre and a black streak. In reflected light microscopy, it is white with no internal reflections. The reflectance values (in air,Rin %) are: 27.0 (470 nm); 25.6 (546 nm); 25.2 (589 nm), and 24.6 (650 nm). The average of 20 electron-microprobe analyses is Co 71.53, Cu 0.58, Mn 0.67, Si 0.25, O 26.78, total 99.82 wt.%, corresponding to the empirical formula calculated on the basis of 4 O apfu: (Co2+0.92Cu2+0.02Si4+0.02)Σ0.96(Co3+1.98Mn3+0.03)Σ2.01O4.00, with Co2+and Co3+partitioned using charge balance. The ideal formula is Co2+Co3+2O4. Guite is cubic with space groupFd$\bar{3}$m. The unit cell parameters refined from the single crystal X-ray diffraction data are:a= 8.0898(1) Å,V= 529.436(11) Å3andZ= 8. The calculated density of guite is 6.003 g/cm3. The eight strongest observed powder X-ray diffraction lines [din Å (I/I0) (hkl)] are: 4.6714 (16.7) (111), 2.8620 (18.4) (220), 2.4399 (100) (311), 2.3348 (10.4) (222), 2.0230 (24.8) (400), 1.5556 (26.3) (511, 333), 1.4296 (37.7) (440) and 1.0524 (10.1) (731, 553). The crystal structure of guite was determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction and refined toR= 0.0132 for 3748 (69 unique) reflections. Guite has a typical spinel-type structure with Co2+in tetrahedral coordination with a Co2+–O bonding length of 1.941(1) Å, and Co3+in octahedral coordination with a Co3+–O bonding length of 1.919(1) Å. The structure is composed of cross-linked framework of chains of Co3+–O6octahedra sharing the equilateral triangle edges (2.550 Å) in three directions [0 1 1], [1 1 0], [1 0 1] with Co2+filling the tetrahedral interstices among the chains. Guite is named in honour of Prof. Xiangping Gu (1964–).

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