Abstract

Tourmaline has been synthesized hydrothermally at 200 MPa between 300 and 700 °C from oxide mixtures with Mg–Al ratios for the end members dravite NaMg3Al6(Si6O18)(BO3)3(OH)3(OH) and Mg-foitite ❏(Mg2Al)Al6 (Si6O18)(BO3)3(OH)3(OH). Six different Na concentrations were investigated to determine the distribution of Na between tourmaline and fluid in the SiO2-saturated system Na2O–MgO–Al2O3–SiO2–B2O3–H2O–HCl. Synthetic tourmaline ranges from X-site vacant (❏) tourmaline (Mg-foitite) to nearly ideal dravite with Na=0.95 apfu. There are small, but significant, amounts of proton deficiency and negligible tetrahedral Al. Chemical variation is primarily caused by the substitutions Al❏Mg–1Na–1 and minor AlMg–1H–1. Varying amounts of Na and ❏ determine the Mg/Al ratios. Besides tourmaline and quartz, additional Mg–Al phases are chlorite and, at 700 °C, cordierite. Albite is also present at high Na concentrations in the bulk composition. The c dimension of the tourmaline crystals increases with Na in tourmaline. The amount of Na in the X-site depends strongly on the bulk concentration of Na in the system as well as on the temperature. These factors in turn control the phase assemblage and the composition of the fluid phase. For the assemblage tourmaline + quartz + chlorite/cordierite + fluid, a linear relationship exists between Na concentration in the fluid (quenched after the run) and tourmaline with temperature: T °C [±25 °C]=(Nafluid/Natur)×558.878-14.692 (r2=0.96).

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