Published December 7, 2022 | Version Accepted Version + Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

X-ray Diffraction Reveals Two Structural Transitions in Szomolnokite

  • 1. ROR icon California Institute of Technology
  • 2. ROR icon Johns Hopkins University
  • 3. ROR icon University of Illinois at Chicago

Abstract

Hydrated sulfates have been identified and studied in a wide variety of environments on Earth, Mars, and the icy satellites of the solar system. The subsurface presence of hydrous sulfur-bearing phases to any extent necessitates a better understanding of their thermodynamic and elastic properties at pressure. End-member experimental and computational data are lacking and are needed to accurately model hydrous, sulfur-bearing planetary interiors. In this work, high-pressure X-ray diffraction (XRD) and synchrotron Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) measurements were conducted on szomolnokite (FeSO₄·H₂O) up to ~83 and 24 GPa, respectively. This study finds a monoclinic-triclinic (C2/c to P1̅) structural phase transition occurring in szomolnokite between 5.0(1) and 6.6(1) GPa and a previously unknown triclinic-monoclinic (P1̅ to P2₁) structural transition occurring between 12.7(3) and 16.8(3) GPa. The high-pressure transition was identified by the appearance of distinct reflections in the XRD patterns that cannot be attributed to a second phase related to the dissociation of the P1̅ phase, and it is further characterized by increased H₂O bonding within the structure. We fit third-order Birch-Murnaghan equations of state for each of the three phases identified in our data and refit published data to compare the elastic parameters of szomolnokite, kieserite (MgSO4·H2O), and blödite (Na₂Mg(SO₄)₂·4H₂O). At ambient pressure, szomolnokite is less compressible than blödite and more than kieserite, but by 7 GPa both szomolnokite and kieserite have approximately the same bulk modulus, while blödite's remains lower than both phases up to 20 GPa. These results indicate the stability of szomolnokite's high-pressure monoclinic phase and the retention of water within the structure up to pressures found in planetary deep interiors.

Additional Information

© 2023 by the Mineralogical Society of America. We thank the W.M. Keck Foundation and the National Science Foundation (NSF-CSEDI-EAR-1600956, 2009935) for supporting this work. O.P. acknowledges the support of DOE NNSA SSGF (DE-NA0003960). Work at the National Synchrotron Light Source II at Brookhaven National Laboratory was funded by the Department of Energy (DEAC98-06CH10886). The use of the 22-IR-1 beamline was supported by COMPRES under NSF Cooperative Agreement EAR 11-57758 and CDAC (DE-FC03-03N00144). Deposit item AM-23-38147, Online Materials. Deposit items are free to all readers and found on the MSA website, via the specific issue's Table of Contents (go to http://www.minsocam.org/MSA/AmMin/TOC/2023/Mar2023_data/Mar2023_data.html).

Attached Files

Accepted Version - 8147PardoPreprint.pdf

Supplemental Material - AM-23-38301.zip

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Additional details

Identifiers

Eprint ID
118226
Resolver ID
CaltechAUTHORS:20221205-211550925

Funding

W. M. Keck Foundation
NSF
EAR-1600956
NSF
EAR-2009935
Department of Energy (DOE)
DE-NA0003960
Department of Energy (DOE)
DE-AC98-06CH10886
NSF
EAR 11-57758
Department of Energy (DOE)
DE-FC03-03N00144

Dates

Created
2022-12-07
Created from EPrint's datestamp field
Updated
2023-05-05
Created from EPrint's last_modified field

Caltech Custom Metadata

Caltech groups
Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences (GPS), Seismological Laboratory