Academic literature on the topic 'Melanothallite'

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Journal articles on the topic "Melanothallite"

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Araújo, B. S., A. M. Arévalo-López, J. P. Attfield, C. W. A. Paschoal, and A. P. Ayala. "Spin-phonon coupling in melanothallite Cu2OCl2." Applied Physics Letters 113, no. 22 (November 26, 2018): 222901. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.5054928.

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Nishiyama, Masahide, Akira Oyamada, Tetsuaki Itou, Satoru Maegawa, Hirotaka Okabe, and Jun Akimitsu. "NMR study of pyrochlore lattice antiferromagnet, melanothallite Cu2OCl2." Journal of Physics: Conference Series 320 (September 28, 2011): 012030. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/320/1/012030.

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Zhao, Li, Maria Teresa Fernández-Díaz, Liu Hao Tjeng, and Alexander C. Komarek. "Oxyhalides: A new class of high-TC multiferroic materials." Science Advances 2, no. 5 (May 2016): e1600353. http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.1600353.

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Magnetoelectric multiferroics have attracted enormous attention in the past years because of their high potential for applications in electronic devices, which arises from the intrinsic coupling between magnetic and ferroelectric ordering parameters. The initial finding in TbMnO3 has triggered the search for other multiferroics with higher ordering temperatures and strong magnetoelectric coupling for applications. To date, spin-driven multiferroicity is found mainly in oxides, as well as in a few halogenides. We report multiferroic properties for synthetic melanothallite Cu2OCl2, which is the first discovery of multiferroicity in a transition metal oxyhalide. Measurements of pyrocurrent and the dielectric constant in Cu2OCl2 reveal ferroelectricity below the Néel temperature of ~70 K. Thus, melanothallite belongs to a new class of multiferroic materials with an exceptionally high critical temperature. Powder neutron diffraction measurements reveal an incommensurate magnetic structure below TN, and all magnetic reflections can be indexed with a propagation vector [0.827(7), 0, 0], thus discarding the claimed pyrochlore-like “all-in–all-out” spin structure for Cu2OCl2, and indicating that this transition metal oxyhalide is, indeed, a spin-induced multiferroic material.
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Krivovichev, S. V., S. K. Filatov, and P. C. Burns. "THE CUPRITE-LIKE FRAMEWORK OF OCu4 TETRAHEDRA IN THE CRYSTAL STRUCTURE OF SYNTHETIC MELANOTHALLITE, Cu2OCl2, AND ITS NEGATIVE THERMAL EXPANSION." Canadian Mineralogist 40, no. 4 (August 1, 2002): 1185–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.2113/gscanmin.40.4.1185.

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Kruszewski, Łukasz, Mateusz Świerk, Rafał Siuda, Eligiusz Szełęg, and Beata Marciniak-Maliszewska. "Third Worldwide Occurrence of Juangodoyite, Na2Cu(CO3)2, and Other Secondary Na, Cu, Mg, and Ca Minerals in the Fore-Sudetic Monocline (Lower Silesia, SW Poland)." Minerals 10, no. 2 (February 20, 2020): 190. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/min10020190.

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Na-Cu carbonates are relatively rare secondary minerals in weathering zones of ore deposits. Hereby we describe mineral composition and crystal chemistry of the most important secondary (Na)Cu minerals and their Na- and Mg-bearing associates forming rich paragenesis in Rudna IX mine. A non-bulky Ca-rich dripstone-like paragenesis from Lubin Główny mine is also characterized, using Powder X-Ray Diffraction, Rietveld, and Electron Microprobe methods. Light blue juangodoyite (3rd occurrence worldwide) and darker chalconatronite are the most important members of the Rudna IX paragenesis, being associated with malachite, aragonite (intergrown with hydromagnesite and northupite), and probably cornwallite. Most of the minerals are chemically close to their ideal composition, with minor Mg substitution in malachite. Cu chlorides are mainly represented by clinoatacamite and probably herbertsmithite. Additional, minor phases include trace Cu minerals langite, wroewolfeite, and a lavendulan-group mineral, and monohydrocalcite. Separate halite-rich encrustations are shown to be filled with eriochalcite, ktenasite, and kröhnkite. The most likely to be confirmed coexisting species include paratacamite, wooldridgeite/nesquehonite, johillerite, melanothallite, and kipushite. The Lubin paragenesis mainly comprises aragonite, gypsum, rapidcreekite, and monohydrocalcite, with trace vaterite. Blue colouration is mainly provided by a yet unspecified Ni-, Co-, Mg-, and Mn-bearing Cu-Zn-Ca arsenate mineral close to parnauite.
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Pekov, I. V., N. V. Zubkova, M. E. Zelenski, V. O. Yapaskurt, Yu S. Polekhovsky, O. A. Fadeeva, and D. Yu Pushcharovsky. "Yaroshevskite, Cu9O2(VO4)4Cl2, a new mineral from the Tolbachik volcano, Kamchatka, Russia." Mineralogical Magazine 77, no. 1 (February 2013): 107–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1180/minmag.2013.077.1.10.

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AbstractA new mineral, yaroshevskite, ideally Cu9O2(VO4)4Cl2, occurs in sublimates collected from the Yadovitaya fumarole at the Second scoria cone of the Northern Breakthrough of the Great Tolbachik Fissure Eruption, Tolbachik volcano, Kamchatka, Russia. It is associated with euchlorine, fedotovite, hematite, tenorite, lyonsite, melanothallite, atlasovite, kamchatkite and secondary avdoninite, belloite and chalcanthite. Yaroshevskite forms isolated prismatic crystals, up to 0.1 × 0.15 × 0.3 mm in size, on the surface of euchlorine crusts. The mineral is opaque and black, with a reddish black streak and lustre between metallic and adamantine. Yaroshevskite is brittle, no cleavage was observed and the fracture is uneven. The Mohs hardness is ~3½ (corresponding to a mean VHN micro-indentation hardness of 172 kg mm -2) and the calculated density is 4.26 g cm-3. In reflected light, yaroshevskite is grey with a weak bluish hue. Pleochroism, internal reflections and bireflectance were not observed. Anisotropy is very weak. The composition (wt.%) determined by electron microprobe is: CuO 61.82, ZnO 0.53, Fe2O3 0.04, V2O531.07, As2O50.32, MoO3 1.56, Cl 6.23, O=Cl2 1.41; total 100.16. The empirical formula, calculated on the basis of 20 (O + Cl) anions is (Cu8.80 Zn0.07 Fe0.01)Σ 8.88(V3.87Mo0.12As0.03)σ 4.02O18.01Cl1.99. Yaroshevskite is triclinic, space group P, a = 6.4344(11), b = 8.3232(13), c = 9.1726(16) Å , α = 105.338(14), β = 96.113(14), γ = 107.642(1)°, V = 442.05(13) Å3 and Z = 1. The nine strongest reflections in the X-ray powder pattern [dobs in Å (I)(hkl)] are as follows: 8.65(100)(001); 6.84(83)(01); 6.01(75)(100); 5.52(60)(01); 4.965(55)(011); 4.198(67)(1); 4.055(65)(110); 3.120(55)(021); 2.896(60)(21,003,20). The crystal structure was solved by direct methods from single-crystal X-ray diffraction data and refined to R = 0.0737. The yaroshevskite structure is unique. It is based on corrugated layers made up of chains of edge-sharing flat squares with central Cu2+ cations [Cu(1), Cu(4) and Cu(5)]; neighbouring chains are connected via groups consisting of three Cu2+ -centred squares [two Cu(3) and Cu(6)]. Neighbouring layers are connected via pairs of Cu(2)O4Cl five-coordinate polyhedra and isolated VO4 tetrahedra. The structure of yaroshevskite can also be considered in terms of oxygen-centred tetrahedra: O(7)Cu4 tetrahedra are connected via common Cu(4) and Cu(5) vertices to form pyroxene-like chains [O2Cu6]∞. In this context, the structural formula can be written Cu3[O2Cu6][VO4]4Cl2. The mineral name honours the Russian geochemist Alexei A. Yaroshevsky (b. 1934) of Moscow State University.
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Guo, H., L. Zhao, W. Schmidt, M. T. Fernández-Díaz, Ch Becker, A. Melendez-Sans, W. Peng, M. Zbiri, P. Hansmann, and A. C. Komarek. "Multiferroic properties of melanothallite Cu2OCl2." Physical Review Materials 3, no. 12 (December 16, 2019). http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/physrevmaterials.3.124405.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Melanothallite"

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Parry, Thomas J. "I. Thermodynamics and Magnetism of Cu2OCl2 II. Repairs to Microcalorimeter the "2"s are subscripts, and the second 2 is preceded by a lower case L, not a one." Diss., CLICK HERE for online access, 2008. http://contentdm.lib.byu.edu/ETD/image/etd2609.pdf.

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