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Tripuhyite
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Tripuhyite
Tripuhyite from the Tafone Mine, Grosseto Province, Tuscany, Italy
General
CategoryAntimonate mineral
FormulaFeSbO4
IMA symbolTpy[1]
Strunz classification4.DB.05
Crystal systemTetragonal
Crystal classDitetragonal dipyramidal (4/mmm)
H-M symbol: (4/m 2/m 2/m)
Space groupP41/mnm
Unit cella = 4.63, c = 9.14 [Å]; Z = 2
Identification
ColorYellowish brown, lemon-yellow, brown-black
Crystal habitFibrous to fine-grained aggregates
Mohs scale hardness6 - 7
LusterDull to earthy
StreakCanary-yellow to dark brown with a greenish tinge
DiaphaneityTranslucent
Specific gravity5.82
Optical propertiesUniaxial (+), canary-yellow color (transmitted light)
Refractive indexnω = 2.190 nε = 2.330
Birefringenceδ = 0.140
PleochroismNone
SolubilityInsoluble in acids
Other characteristicsAntiferromagnetic
References[2][3][4]

Tripuhyite is an iron antimonate mineral with composition FeSbO4.

Nomenclature

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The name of the mineral comes from the locality of Tripuhy, Ouro Preto, Minas Gerais, Brazil, where it was discovered. Hussak and Prior[5] first described the mineral tripuhyite as an oxide of iron and antimony, and assigned it the composition Fe2Sb2O7. When a mineral with composition FeSbO4 was later discovered in Squaw Creek, New Mexico (US), it was considered erroneously as a new mineral and it was given the name squawcreekite.[6] However, other studies had shown that the original tripuhyite was also FeSbO4.[7] In 2002, the Commission on New Minerals and Mineral Names (CNMMN) of the International Mineralogical Association (IMA), approved the redefinition of tripuhyite as FeSbO4 and the discreditation of squawcreekite.[8]

Crystal Structure

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FeSbO4 exhibits the rutile structure, with a tetragonal unit cell. The cations are octahedrally coordinated to oxygen anions, with the octahedra sharing edges along the c-direction. Fe(III) and Sb(V) cations are distributed in a disordered way over the octahedral sites.

References

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Bibliography

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