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Article

Radvaniceite, GeS2, a New Germanium Sulphide, from the Kateřina Mine, Radvanice near Trutnov, Czech Republic

1
Department of Mineralogy and Petrology, National Museum, Cirkusová 1740, 193 00 Prague 9—Horní Počernice, Czech Republic
2
Czech Geological Survey, Klárov 3, 118 21 Prague 1, Czech Republic
3
Department of Geological Sciences, Faculty of Science, Masaryk University, Kotlářská 2, 611 37 Brno, Czech Republic
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Minerals 2022, 12(2), 222; https://doi.org/10.3390/min12020222
Submission received: 18 January 2022 / Revised: 4 February 2022 / Accepted: 6 February 2022 / Published: 9 February 2022
(This article belongs to the Collection New Minerals)

Abstract

:
The new mineral radvaniceite, GeS2, was found on the burning coal mine dump of the abandoned Kateřina coal mine at Radvanice, near Trutnov, northern Bohemia, Czech Republic. It occurs as aggregates resembling cotton tufts up to 5 mm in size; they are composed of acicular crystals up to fibres about 1–5 μm thick and up to 3 mm in length. Individual fibres are distorted and partly resemble bent wires nucleated on rock fragments or on black, crumbly ash, in association with minerals of solid solutions of Bi-Sb and stangersite, herzenbergite, and greenockite. Radvaniceite was also observed as irregular grains in a range of 10–50 μm in size, forming part of earlier multicomponent aggregates upon which the above-described crystals grow. These aggregates are formed, in addition to radvaniceite, by minerals of Bi-Sb, Bi2S3-Sb2S3 and Bi2S3-Bi2Se3 solid solutions, Bi3S2, Bi-sulpho/seleno/tellurides, tellurium, unnamed PbGeS3, Cd4GeS6, GeAsS, Sn5Sb3S7, stangersite, greenockite, cadmoindite, herzenbergite, teallite, and Sn- and/or Se-bearing galena. Radvaniceite is formed under reducing conditions by direct crystallization from hot gasses (250–350 °C) containing Cl and F at a depth of 30–60 cm under the surface of a burning coal mine dump; the mine dump fire started spontaneously, and no anthropogenic material was deposited there. Acicular crystals up to fibres of radvaniceite are elastic to flexible; are white to yellowish grey in colour, with white streaks; are translucent in transmitted light; and have vitreous to adamantine lustre. Cleavage and fracture were not observed. The calculated density is 3.05 and 2.99 g·cm−3 for the empirical and ideal formulae, respectively. Radvaniceite is transparent under the microscope, with a very weak pleochroism (from colourless to pale greenish yellow), and has a refraction index > 1.8. Under reflected light, radvaniceite is light grey; bireflectance and pleochroism were not observed due to abundant, white to grey, internal reflections. Anisotropy in crossed polars is distinct with grey rotation tints. Reflectance values of radvaniceite in air (Rmin–Rmax, %) are: 15.4–18.8 at 470 nm, 16.1–20.4 at 546 nm, 16.4–20.8 at 589 nm, and 16.9–20.9 at 650 nm. The empirical formula, based on electron-microprobe analyses, is (Ge0.99Bi0.01)Σ1.00(S1.97Se0.03)Σ2.00. The ideal formula is GeS2, which requires Ge 53.10, S 46.90, total 100 wt. %. Radvaniceite is monoclinic, Pc, a = 6.8831(12), b = 22.501(3), c = 6.8081(11) Å, β = 120.365(9)°, with V = 909.8(4) Å3 and Z = 12. The strongest reflections of the powder X-ray diffraction pattern [d, Å (I) (hkl)] are: 5.7395 (100) (11-1, 110), 5.2067 (16) (021), 3.3650 (33) (111, 11-2), 2.8417 (33) (022), 2.8236 (16) (170, 17-1), 2.8134 (20) (080) and 2.6257 (19) (240, 24-2). According to X-ray powder diffraction data and Raman spectroscopy, radvaniceite is a natural analogue of synthetic monoclinic low-temperature β-GeS2 with distorted GeS4 tetrahedra forming four corner-sharing tetrahedral chains, which are connected by corner-sharing tetrahedra in a three-dimensional structure. We named the mineral after its type locality, Radvanice, one of the past centres of coal mining in the Czech limb of the Intra-Sudetic Basin. This mineral and its name have been approved by the Commission on New Minerals, Nomenclature and Classification of the International Mineralogical Association (number 2021-052).

Graphical Abstract

1. Introduction

Synthetic GeS2 phases were known long before they were found in natural conditions, and were studied due their interesting electronic and optical properties [1]. Four crystalline modifications of GeS2 are known: the first is a high-temperature (stable to 850 °C) α-GeS2 modification, which crystallises in the monoclinic space group P21/c [2,3,4]. The second is a low-temperature β-GeS2 modification [5], which crystallises in the monoclinic space group Pc [6]. It was previously described with orthorhombic symmetry and space group Fdd2 [7,8]. The transformation between α-GeS2 and β-GeS2 occurs at 497 °C at high sulphur activity, or at 520 °C if associated with GeS [5,9]. The other two modifications occur in high-pressure/high-temperature conditions: tetragonal γ-GeS2 with space group I-42d [10] and tetragonal δ-GeS2 with space group I41/acd [11], the latter was also prepared in aqueous solution by mild sol ± gel process [1]. It should be noted that, in this paper, we use the notation α-GeS2 for the high-temperature modification of the GeS2 phase with P21/c symmetry and β-GeS2 for the low-temperature modification showing Pc symmetry, as this notation is in agreement with the original work of Dittmar and Schäfer [3], and subsequently MacLachlan et al. [1].
Contrary to the aforementioned studies, Bletskan [5] used a different notation, where α and β suffixes for GeS2 are interchanged. Although the β-GeS2 phase (i.e., the analogue of radvaniceite) represents the low-temperature phase, and similar phases stable at standard conditions are commonly referred as α, we keep the original notation.
The first find of the unnamed β-GeS2 in natural conditions was described from burning waste piles in eastern Pennsylvania (locality Forestville), where the mineral occurs as small tufts (up to 1 mm) of radiating white fibres, probably formed by the vapor–liquid–solid growth mechanism [12,13]. The results of a more detailed study of this mineral phase have not yet been published. The first descriptions of radvaniceite (as an unnamed GeS2) from the burning mine dump of the Kateřina mine, at Radvanice, near Trutnov (Czech Republic), were given by Sejkora et al. [14] and Sejkora [15]. At the time of their publication, the strict rules of the International Mineralogical Association Commission on New Minerals and Mineral Names [16] did not allow submission of this natural phase as a valid mineral species: “It has therefore been decided that, as a general rule, products of combustion are not to be considered as minerals in the future”. However, the recent change of rules (see CNMNC-IMA proposal 16-F: “Crystal phases forming on the burning coal-dumps with no human agency initiating the fire and no anthropogenic material deposited there should be treated as minerals.” [17]) allows the proposal of this new mineral. Radvaniceite is named after its type locality Radvanice, one of the past centres of coal mining in the Czech limb of the Intra-Sudetic Basin, and a unique locality worldwide with respect to the number and quantity of metal- and metalloid-bearing sublimates [14,15,18,19,20,21]. The new mineral and its name have been approved by the Commission on New Minerals, Nomenclature and Classification of the International Mineralogical Association (number 2021-052). The holotype specimen of radvaniceite is deposited in the collections of the Department of Mineralogy and Petrology, National Museum, in Prague, Cirkusová 1740, 19 300 Praha 9, Czech Republic, under the catalogue number P1P 9/2021.

2. Occurrence

Radvaniceite samples were collected from 1995 to 1998 in the central part of a burning coal mine dump in the abandoned Kateřina coal mine (GPS: 50°33′39.0″ N 16°03′56.2″ E), which is situated in the eastern part of the Radvanice village, about 12 km east of the district town of Trutnov (northern Bohemia, Czech Republic). At this mine dump, mine wastes from the former Kateřina mine were deposited for over 100 years; their total volume was estimated to be 2.331 million m3 [22]. In the past, coal was only hand-picked there, and therefore dump material contained 19 vol.% coal on average, and locally up to 40 vol.% [22,23]. Later, during uranium mining at the Kateřina mine, all low-uranium material, including coal and coal-bearing claystones (locally rich in pyrite and base element sulphides) were deposited in this mine dump. The mine dump fire started spontaneously before 1967 and culminated between 1980 and 1981 [22]. Temperatures in this burning dump reached up to 1000 °C or more. Due to possible ecological hazards for the Radvanice village, the Czech government decided to conduct disposal and remediation operations in this mine dump. The restoration works started in 1998 and were successfully completed in 2005 [22,23].
In the Kateřina mine area, six coal measures are known; thickness of the exploited measures reached ~1 m, exceptionally up to 1.5–1.9 m. The coal-bearing sediments belong to the upper part of the Odolov Member (Stephanian B) of the Czech limb of the Intra-Sudetic Basin which comprises sediments from the Early Mississippian (Namurian C) up to the Early Triassic age [24]. The characteristic feature of the Radvanice coals and surrounding sediments is their mineralization and enrichment in Se, Mo, As, Pb, Cu, Zn, Ge, U, Cd, Sb, Bi, and other elements [25,26,27]. The increased content of some elements in coal-bearing sediments have been studied since 1945. In addition to experiments with copper and germanium extraction, the uranium mineralization (uraninite and coffinite) was mined from 1952 to 1957. After 1957, only coal was mined, and in 1993 all mines in the Radvanice area were closed.
Radvaniceite was found on a part of the mine dump within an area of 2 m2 and about 30–60 cm under the surface. The temperature of mine dump material reached up 300 °C at this site. Massive crusts, reaching a thickness of about 1–5 cm in places, and formed by sal ammoniac, cryptohalite, and bararite, as well as sulphur and dark red amorphous As-rich sulphur, were developed above the horizon with germanium-bearing mineral phases. Two types of radvaniceite were observed in the studied material. The first comprised rich groups of fibres in association with stangersite [20], herzenbergite, greenockite, and members of Bi-Sb solid solutions. The second type represents irregular radvaniceite grains in the earlier multicomponent aggregates on which the above described fibres grow. In addition to radvaniceite, these aggregates were formed by minerals of Bi-Sb, Bi2S3-Sb2S3 and Bi2S3-Bi2Se3 solid solutions, Bi3S2, Bi-sulpho/seleno/tellurides, tellurium, unnamed PbGeS3, Cd4GeS6, GeAsS, Sn5Sb3S7, stangersite, greenockite, cadmoindite, herzenbergite, teallite, and Sn- and/or Se-bearing galena. Radvaniceite formed under reducing conditions by direct crystallization from hot gases (250–350 °C) containing Cl and F at depths of 30–60 cm under the surface of a burning coal mine dump.

3. Physical and Optical Properties

As mentioned above, two morphological types of radvaniceite were observed in the studied material. The first type is represented by aggregates resembling cotton tufts up to 5 mm in size (Figure 1); they are composed of acicular crystals up to fibres about 1–5 μm thick and up to 3 mm in length. Individual fibres are distorted and partly resemble bent wires (Figure 2). The second type forms irregular grains 10–50 μm in size as a part of previously formed multicomponent aggregates. Radvaniceite is white to yellowish grey in colour, with white streaks. The mineral is translucent in transmitted light and has vitreous to adamantine lustre. Cleavage and fracture were not observed, the tenacity is elastic to flexible. The calculated density (Z = 12) is 3.05 and 2.99 g·cm−3 for empirical and ideal formulae, respectively. Radvaniceite is transparent under a microscope, with a very weak pleochroism (from colourless to pale greenish yellow). The index of refraction is >1.8; other properties cannot be determined due to fine nature of the sample.
In reflected light radvaniceite is light grey; bireflectance and pleochroism were not observed due to abundant white to grey internal reflections. Anisotropy in crossed polars is distinct, with grey rotation tints. Reflectance percentages (air) for the four COM wavelengths (Rmin and Rmax, %) for radvaniceite are: 15.4–18.8 (470 nm), 16.1–20.4 (546 nm), 16.4–20.8 (589 nm), and 6.9–20.9 (650 nm). The full set of reflectance values (spectrophotometer MSP400 Tidas coupled to a Leica microscope, objective 100×, WTiC standard Zeiss 370 in air) are given in Table 1 and plotted in Figure 3.

4. Chemical Composition

The holotype sample of radvaniceite was analysed using a JEOL Superprobe 733 electron microprobe operated in the wavelength-dispersive mode with an accelerating voltage of 20 kV, a specimen current of 20 nA, and a beam diameter of 1–2 μm. The following lines and standards were used: Kα: chalcopyrite (Fe, S); Lα: Bi (Bi), CdS (Cd), Cu3AsS4 (As), Ge (Ge), Sb2Se3 (Sb, Se), Sn (Sn); Mα: PbS (Pb). The raw intensities were converted into concentrations automatically, using the online ZAF correction program supplied by JEOL. Detection limits were close to 0.02–0.05 wt. %. Absence of H2O and CO2 was confirmed by Raman spectroscopy. Chemical analyses of other samples were performed using a Cameca SX100 electron microprobe operating in wavelength-dispersive mode (15 kV, 10 nA, and 0.7 μm wide beam). The following standards and X-ray lines were used to minimise line overlaps: Ge (GeLα), Bi (BiMβ), CdTe (CdLα), FeS2 (FeKα, SKα), NiAs (AsLβ), PbS (PbMα), PbSe (SeLβ), PbTe (TeLα), and Sb2S3 (SbLα). Peak counting times were 20 s for all elements, and one half of the peak time for each background. Some elements, such as Cd, Fe, As, Pb, Te, and Sb, were found to be below the detection limits (0.02–0.05 wt. %). Raw intensities were converted to the concentrations of elements using the automatic “PAP” [28] matrix-correction procedure.
Chemical composition of radvaniceite from the holotype sample (Table 2) corresponds to the ideal formula GeS2 with only minor contents of Sn, Sb, As, and Bi up to 0.01 apfu, and Pb up to 0.003 apfu, respectively. The extent of SeS-1 substitution in anions of this sample is limited to 0.06 apfu Se (Figure 4). The empirical formula calculated from the mean of 12 point analyses on the basis of 3 apfu is as follows: (Ge0.99Bi0.01)Σ1.00(S1.97Se0.03)Σ2.00. The ideal formula, GeS2, requires Ge 53.10, S 46.90, total 100 wt. %. The representative analyses for the holotype and other samples are given in Table 3. The selenium contents of other samples were detected in the range 0.09–0.10 apfu (Figure 4).

5. Raman Spectroscopy

The Raman spectra of radvaniceite were collected in the range of 36–1800 cm−1 using a DXR dispersive Raman Spectrometer (Thermo Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA) mounted on a confocal Olympus microscope. The Raman signal was excited by an unpolarised green 532 nm solid state, diode-pumped laser, and detected by a CCD detector. The experimental parameters were: 100× objective, 10 s exposure time, 100 exposures, 50 μm pinhole spectrograph aperture and 1 mW laser power level. Eventual thermal damage of the measured points was excluded by visual inspection of excited surfaces after measurement, by observation of possible decay of spectral features at the start of excitation, and by checking for thermal downshift of Raman lines. The instrument was set up by a software-controlled calibration procedure using multiple neon emission lines (wavelength calibration), multiple polystyrene Raman bands (laser frequency calibration) and standardised white-light sources (intensity calibration). Spectral manipulations were performed using Omnic 9 software (Thermo Scientific).
The Raman spectrum of radvaniceite is given in Figure 5, the main bands observed are (in wavenumbers): 437, 411, 374, 343, 311, 281, 262, 204, 182, 175, 138, 131, 105, and 51 cm−1. The experimental spectrum agrees very well with published Raman spectra of synthetic low-temperature β-GeS2 (e.g., Inoue et al. [29]; Černošek et al. [30]), and distinctly differs from data for high-temperature α-GeS2 (e.g., Popović [31]; Popović et al. [32]; Inoue et al. [29]; Černošek et al. [30]; Jakšić [33]). According to Bletskan et al. [4], the intramolecular vibrations of the GeS4 tetrahedra can be described by irreducible representations of the Td factor-group as follows: Γin = A1 + E + 2F2. The A1 representation corresponds to symmetric stretching vibration ν1 (Ge-S). The F2 representation is constituted by antisymmetric stretching ν3 (Ge-S) and antisymmetric bending ν4 (S-Ge-S) vibrations, both triply degenerated. Double degenerated E representation describes symmetric bending ν2 vibration. For the “free” GeS4 group, wavenumbers of vibrations (all Raman active) are as follows: ν3 = 417, ν1 = 386, ν4 = 205 and ν2 = 170 cm−1 [34]. As a result of GeS4 tetrahedra deformation in the crystalline field, the degenerated vibrations may be split into two (ν2) or three components (ν3, ν4). Observed bands in the range 450–250 cm−1 are attributed to symmetric (ν1) and antisymmetric (ν3) stretching vibrations of corner-sharing GeS4 tetrahedra; the most intensive band at 343 cm−1 is probably connected with ν1 symmetric stretching vibration [29]. The low intensity bands in the range 250–150 cm−1 are attributed to antisymmetric bending ν4 and symmetric bending ν2 vibrations. The bands below 150 cm−1 should correspond to the external vibrations.

6. Powder X-ray Diffraction and Crystal Structure

Attempts to obtain single-crystal X-ray data of radvaniceite were unsuccessful due to the nature of the studied material, which is formed by bent fibres (Figure 2).
The X-ray powder diffraction data for radvaniceite (Table 4) were recorded at room temperature using a Bruker D8 Advance diffractometer equipped with a solid-state LynxEye detector and secondary monochromator producing CuKα radiation, housed at the Department of Mineralogy and Petrology, National Museum, Prague, Czech Republic. The instrument was operated at 40 kV and 40 mA. In order to minimise the background, the powder samples were placed (without any liquid) on the surface of a flat silicon wafer. The powder pattern was collected in the Bragg–Brentano geometry in the range 3–70° 2θ, step 0.01° and counting time of 20 s per step (total duration of the experiment was c. 30 h). The positions and intensities of diffractions were found and refined using the Pearson VII profile-shape function of the ZDS program package [35].
The PXRD data of radvaniceite agree well with the theoretical pattern calculated by the PowderCell 2.3 program [36] from the crystal structure information published by Dittmar and Schäfer [6] for β-GeS2; this calculated pattern was also used for indexing of experimental data. The following unit-cell parameters, refined by the least-squares program of Burnham [37]: a = 6.8831(12), b = 22.501(3), c = 6.8081(11) Å, β = 120.365(9)°, V = 909.8(4) Å3 and Z = 12, agree very well with data published by Dittmar and Schäfer [6] for β-GeS2.
Crystal structure of low-temperature β-GeS2 was published by Zachariasen [7] in orthorhombic symmetry (space group Fdd2) with a = 11.60 (5), b = 22.34 (10), c = 6.86 (3) Å; later it was re-determined by Dittmar and Schäfer [6]. In contrast to an earlier determination, they found that it crystallises in the monoclinic space group Pc with unit-cell parameters a = 6.875 (5), b = 22.55 (1), c = 6.809 (5) Å and β = 120.45 (5)°. The crystal structure of radvaniceite is based on corner-sharing GeS4 tetrahedra. In this structure, a system of chains of corner-sharing GeS4 tetrahedra running along [001] and [010] can be visualised. However, these chains are interconnected by corner-sharing of GeS4 tetrahedra, forming a framework structure (Figure 6). From a crystallographic point of view, the GeS4 corner-sharing framework in the radvaniceite crystal structure shows certain similarities to those found in tetrahedral networks of common SiO2 polymorphs. The main difference lies in the angles of Ge-S-Ge and Si-O-Si bonds connecting two adjacent tetrahedra. In β-GeS2, an analogue of radvaniceite, this angle varies from 99.8 to 102.8° whereas in, e.g., α-quartz it has a value of 144° [38]. Another remarkable feature is that the GeS4 tetrahedra in the radvaniceite structure are more distorted than corresponding SiO4 tetrahedra in the α-quartz structure. Whereas the value of quadratic elongation for SiO4 tetrahedra in α-quartz is 1.0002, values for GeS4 tetrahedra in the radvaniceite structure fall within the range of 1.008–1.0099.

7. Note on the Origin of Radvaniceite

The element germanium is compatible with rock-forming silicates, where it substitutes for Si due to its similar ionic radius (0.53 and 0.40 Å, for Si and Ge, respectively) and its possession of the same charge. The bulk Ge content in common rocks varies from ~0.1 to ~2.5 ppm [39,40]. However, Ge can accumulate substantially in some sphalerite deposits, coal, organic matter, and petrified wood [39,40]. As coal from the Radvanice area is substantially enriched in Ge (average 192 g/t, maximum 940 g/t in ash [41]), its spontaneous combustion in the Radvanice dump mobilised Ge and other elements (Sn, Sb, As, Bi, etc.) into escaping hot gases using Cl as a transporting agent (e.g., Laufek et al. [23]) together with omnipresent S and NH3. Radvaniceite locally crystallised when the temperature of such mineralised gasses dropped below the stability of the Ge gaseous complexes.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, J.S. and V.Ž.; methodology, J.S., R.Š., and F.L.; investigation, J.S., R.Š., F.L., and Z.D.; resources, V.Ž. and R.Š.; writing—original draft preparation, J.S. and F.L.; writing—review and editing, J.S. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

The research was financially supported by the Ministry of Culture of the Czech Republic (long-term project DKRVO 2019-2023/1.II.d; National Museum, 00023272). The article was also contributed to by the Strategic Research Plan of the Czech Geological Survey (DKRVO/ČGS 2018-2022, Project No 321183).

Data Availability Statement

All representative data are contained in this work.

Acknowledgments

Anonymous referees as well as academic editors Irina O. Galuskina, Igor V. Pekov and Luca Bindi are acknowledged for comments and suggestions that helped to improve the early version of the manuscript.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. White radvaniceite fibres formed cotton-like aggregates in association with orange stangersite crystals; locality, Radvanice; field of view, 5 mm; photo, J. Sejkora.
Figure 1. White radvaniceite fibres formed cotton-like aggregates in association with orange stangersite crystals; locality, Radvanice; field of view, 5 mm; photo, J. Sejkora.
Minerals 12 00222 g001
Figure 2. Bent fibres of radvaniceite; Radvanice, SEM photo, J. Sejkora.
Figure 2. Bent fibres of radvaniceite; Radvanice, SEM photo, J. Sejkora.
Minerals 12 00222 g002
Figure 3. Reflectivity curves for radvaniceite.
Figure 3. Reflectivity curves for radvaniceite.
Minerals 12 00222 g003
Figure 4. The extent of SeS-1 substitution in radvaniceite from Radvanice.
Figure 4. The extent of SeS-1 substitution in radvaniceite from Radvanice.
Minerals 12 00222 g004
Figure 5. Raman spectrum of radvaniceite in the range 620–36 cm−1.
Figure 5. Raman spectrum of radvaniceite in the range 620–36 cm−1.
Minerals 12 00222 g005
Figure 6. Two views of the crystal structure of radvaniceite showing corner-sharing GeS4 tetrahedra. Note the chains of GeS4 tetrahedra running along the [010] and [001] directions (based on the data for β-GeS2 [6]).
Figure 6. Two views of the crystal structure of radvaniceite showing corner-sharing GeS4 tetrahedra. Note the chains of GeS4 tetrahedra running along the [010] and [001] directions (based on the data for β-GeS2 [6]).
Minerals 12 00222 g006
Table 1. Reflectance values of radvaniceite (measured in air).
Table 1. Reflectance values of radvaniceite (measured in air).
RmaxRminλ (nm)RmaxRminλ (nm)
13.613.140020.616.2560
15.914.242020.816.4580
17.614.844020.816.4589 (COM)
18.515.246020.916.6600
18.815.4470 (COM)20.916.8620
19.115.548020.916.9640
19.615.750020.916.9650 (COM)
20.015.952020.917.0660
20.316.054020.817.2680
20.416.1546 (COM)20.717.3700
Table 2. Chemical data (in wt. %) for the holotype sample of radvaniceite.
Table 2. Chemical data (in wt. %) for the holotype sample of radvaniceite.
ConstituentMeanRangeStand. Dev. (σ)Reference Material
Ge51.8450.82–52.800.54Ge
Pb0.180.00–0.450.15PbS
Sn0.210.00–1.230.39Sn
Bi0.660.20–1.000.21Bi
Sb0.120.00–0.560.17Sb2Se3
As0.120.00–0.380.15Cu3AsS4
S45.6544.42–46.660.68chalcopyrite
Se1.740.49–3.420.91Sb2Se3
total100.52
Table 3. Representative chemical analyses for radvaniceite from Radvanice.
Table 3. Representative chemical analyses for radvaniceite from Radvanice.
HolotypeOther Samples
123456123456
wt. %Ge51.3652.2151.2352.0651.4551.7351.0352.1151.2551.5651.6252.08
Pb0.280.000.000.450.420.160.000.000.000.000.000.00
Sn0.190.000.220.001.230.000.000.000.000.000.000.00
Bi0.790.750.540.201.000.560.000.000.000.000.000.00
Sb0.250.560.220.000.000.160.000.000.000.000.000.00
As0.380.000.000.280.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.00
S46.5445.5645.5446.6644.4245.1243.7943.3243.2143.5443.8542.60
Se0.491.111.411.483.053.084.784.884.954.955.165.33
total100.28100.1999.16101.13101.57100.8199.61100.3199.40100.05100.63100.00
apfuGe0.971.000.980.980.990.990.991.011.001.000.991.02
Pb0.0020.0000.0000.0030.0030.0010.0000.0000.0000.0000.0000.000
Sn0.0020.0000.0030.0000.0140.0000.0000.0000.0000.0000.0000.000
Bi0.0050.0050.0040.0010.0070.0040.0000.0000.0000.0000.0000.000
Sb0.0030.0060.0030.0000.0000.0020.0000.0000.0000.0000.0000.000
As0.0070.0000.0000.0050.0000.0000.0000.0000.0000.0000.0000.000
Σ0.9931.0090.9930.9881.0130.9950.9901.0111.0011.0000.9951.018
S1.9981.9711.9821.9861.9331.9511.9241.9021.9101.9121.9141.886
Se0.0090.0200.0250.0260.0540.0540.0850.0870.0890.0880.0910.096
Σ2.0071.9912.0072.0121.9872.0052.0101.9891.9992.0002.0051.982
Coefficients of empirical formula calculated on the basis of 3 apfu.
Table 4. X-ray powder diffraction data (d in Å) for radvaniceite, the strongest diffractions are reported in bold.
Table 4. X-ray powder diffraction data (d in Å) for radvaniceite, the strongest diffractions are reported in bold.
Imeasdmeas dcalcIcalc *hklImeasdmeas dcalcIcalc *hkl
100.05.7395 Minerals 12 00222 i0015.742210011−13.32.3028 Minerals 12 00222 i0012.30426190
5.7422971102.3042619−1
7.75.6243 5.6252270409.52.2409 Minerals 12 00222 i0012.2406531−1
15.95.2067 5.2071290212.2406531−2
9.14.6547 Minerals 12 00222 i0014.65601113−13.72.1914 Minerals 12 00222 i0012.19137221
4.6560111302.1913622−3
0.94.0658 4.062850414.22.1326 Minerals 12 00222 i0012.13197132
7.33.5891 Minerals 12 00222 i0013.5867191502.1319713−3
3.58672115−17.42.0153 Minerals 12 00222 i0012.0150419−2
32.53.3650 Minerals 12 00222 i0013.3655181112.01504191
3.36551711−210.91.9932 Minerals 12 00222 i0011.993611152
6.23.0996 Minerals 12 00222 i0013.0995171311.99361115−3
3.09951513−23.01.9296 1.92915023
11.62.9707 Minerals 12 00222 i0012.969462003.31.9134 Minerals 12 00222 i0011.91418330
2.9694520−21.9141833−3
9.92.9365 2.937150023.51.8453 Minerals 12 00222 i0011.84431037−1
8.32.8702 Minerals 12 00222 i0012.8711122201.8443937−2
2.87111122−23.01.8116 Minerals 12 00222 i0011.81207350
32.92.8417 2.8418170221.8120735−3
15.92.8236 Minerals 12 00222 i0012.8269211705.71.7865 1.7863110121
2.82692117−15.61.7216 1.7208640−2
19.82.8134 2.81262808012.61.6828 Minerals 12 00222 i0011.682711222
19.02.6257 Minerals 12 00222 i0012.6260142401.68271222−4
2.62601424−25.01.6624 Minerals 12 00222 i0011.661781130
9.42.6040 2.6036230421.66178113−1
11.32.5340 2.53562626−13.01.6454 1.6455744−2
13.42.3271 Minerals 12 00222 i0012.328062604.91.6262 Minerals 12 00222 i0011.62634113
2.3280626−21.6263411−4
Icalc.* —intensities were calculated using the software PowderCell 2.3 [36] on the basis of the crystal structure of β-GeS2 [6].
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Sejkora, J.; Žáček, V.; Škoda, R.; Laufek, F.; Dolníček, Z. Radvaniceite, GeS2, a New Germanium Sulphide, from the Kateřina Mine, Radvanice near Trutnov, Czech Republic. Minerals 2022, 12, 222. https://doi.org/10.3390/min12020222

AMA Style

Sejkora J, Žáček V, Škoda R, Laufek F, Dolníček Z. Radvaniceite, GeS2, a New Germanium Sulphide, from the Kateřina Mine, Radvanice near Trutnov, Czech Republic. Minerals. 2022; 12(2):222. https://doi.org/10.3390/min12020222

Chicago/Turabian Style

Sejkora, Jiří, Vladimír Žáček, Radek Škoda, František Laufek, and Zdeněk Dolníček. 2022. "Radvaniceite, GeS2, a New Germanium Sulphide, from the Kateřina Mine, Radvanice near Trutnov, Czech Republic" Minerals 12, no. 2: 222. https://doi.org/10.3390/min12020222

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