Tuzlaite is a borate mineral, associated with halides, named after the Tuzla salt mines in Bosnia and Hercegovina. A multitude of rare evaporate minerals have been discovered there, it being the only major evaporate deposit in the Balkans.[4] This mineral has been approved as tuzlaite by the International Commission on New Minerals and Mineral Names.[5]

Tuzlaite
General
CategoryBorates
Formula
(repeating unit)
NaCaB5O8(OH)2 · 3H2O
IMA symbolTuz
Strunz classification6.EC.25
Crystal systemMonoclinic
Crystal class2/m - Prismatic
Space groupP21/c
Unit cella = 6.506(1) b = 13.280(3) c = 11.462(3) β = 92.97(2)◦ Z=4
Identification
ColorColorless to White
Crystal habitPrismatic crystals, elongated along [001]
CleavageOn {001}, perfect
Mohs scale hardness2 - 3
LusterSilky to pearly
StreakWhite
Density2.23 g/cm
Optical propertiesBiaxial Positive
Ultraviolet fluorescenceNone
References[1][2][3]

Occurrence

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Tuzlaite is found alongside several rare evaporates such as northupite, searlesite, and bradleyite. Between the layers of salt, there are approximately 50m thick layers of grey to black dolomitic marls that occasionally get cut by white veinlets composed of the mineral tuzlaite.[6] These veinlets can be surrounded by a coronitic halite phase that can be dissolved off with H2O, leaving us with colorless to white crystals of tuzlaite up to 0.5mm in length. Most of these crystals can be intergrown, but some are suitable for X-ray single-crystal structure analysis. [4]

Physical and Optical Properties

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Tuzlaite ranges from white to colorless with a perfect cleavage parallel to {001}. The hardness of the mineral is within the range of 2 to 3 on the Mohs Hardness scale. The lustre of Tuzlaite is silky to pearly and is reliant on its growing conditions and the size of the crystal with no reaction to short-wave and long-wave UV light. Tuzalite decomposes in hydrochloric acid leaving a transparent solution with no residue, but does not react with H2O.[4]

Tuzlaite has refractive indices nx = 1.532(2), ny = 1.544(2), and nz = 1.561(2). The optical orientation is Y = b, Z:a = 14° (in acute angle β). It is optically positive with Δ = 0.029(l), measured with a compensator and calculated from refractive indices. The optic axial angle was measured as 2Vz = 82(1)°; 2Vz = 80.9° was calculated from refractive indices. Indicatrix dispersion wasn't observed.[4]

Chemistry

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(1) (2)
B2O3 52.19 52.24
Al2O3 0.26 -
CaO 14.64 16.83
SrO 0.21 -
Na2O 10.25 9.30
H2O 21.66 21.63
Total 99.21 100.00

(1) Tuzla mine in Bosnia-Herzegovina; average of six analyses by flamephotometry, TGA, and crystal-structure analysis; corresponds to Na1.00(Ca0.87Na0.10Sr0.01)Σ=0.98B4.98Al0.02 O7.92(OH)2 • 3H2O.[6]

(2) NaCaB5O8(OH)2 • 3H2O.[6]

Crystal Structure

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All atoms in the structure for tuzlaite were refined and located. Tuzlaite has a pentaborate sheet structure with layers parallel to (001). These sheets are connected by Ca and Na coordinated with three H2O molecules, where Ca is eightfold coordinated by six borate O atoms and two H2O molecules. Na is sevenfold coordinated by four borate O atoms and three H2O molecules. Na and Ca polyhedra form continuous chains with a Ca-Ca-Na-Na-Ca-Ca sequence. Face sharing occurs between Ca and Na polyhedra. Na and Ca polyhedral chains penetrate the ten-membered borate rings excentrically; thus the remaining space is filled by H2O molecules, which are linked by H bonds to the borate sheet.[4]

See More

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List of Minerals

References

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  1. ^ Vladimir Bermanec, Thomas Armbruster, Darko Tibljas, Darko Sturman, Goran Kniewald; Tuzlaite, NaCa[B5O8(OH)2]·3H2O, a new mineral with a pentaborate sheet structure from the Tuzla salt mine, Bosnia and Hercegovina. American Mineralogist 1994;; 79 (5-6): 562–569.
  2. ^ Warr, Laurence N. (2021-05-18). "IMA–CNMNC approved mineral symbols". Mineralogical Magazine: 1–30. doi:10.1180/mgm.2021.43. ISSN 0026-461X.
  3. ^ John W. Anthony, Richard A. Bideaux, Kenneth W. Bladh, and Monte C. Nichols, Eds., Handbook of Mineralogy, Mineralogical Society of America, Chantilly, VA 20151-1110, USA. http://www.handbookofmineralogy.org/.
  4. ^ a b c d e Vladimir Bermanec, Thomas Armbruster, Darko Tibljas, Darko Sturman, Goran Kniewald; Tuzlaite, NaCa[B5O8(OH)2]·3H2O, a new mineral with a pentaborate sheet structure from the Tuzla salt mine, Bosnia and Hercegovina. American Mineralogist 1994;; 79 (5-6): 562–569.
  5. ^ Warr, Laurence N. (2021-05-18). "IMA–CNMNC approved mineral symbols". Mineralogical Magazine. 85 (3): 291–320. Bibcode:2021MinM...85..291W. doi:10.1180/mgm.2021.43. ISSN 0026-461X.
  6. ^ a b c John W. Anthony, Richard A. Bideaux, Kenneth W. Bladh, and Monte C. Nichols, Eds., Handbook of Mineralogy, Mineralogical Society of America, Chantilly, VA 20151-1110, USA. http://www.handbookofmineralogy.org/ .