The crystal structure of an oscillatory zoned erythrite sample from Aghbar mine, Bou Azzer, Morocco, was refined using synchrotron high-resolution powder X-ray diffraction (HRPXRD) data, Rietveld refinement, space group
C2/
m, and Z
= 2. The crystal contains two sets of
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The crystal structure of an oscillatory zoned erythrite sample from Aghbar mine, Bou Azzer, Morocco, was refined using synchrotron high-resolution powder X-ray diffraction (HRPXRD) data, Rietveld refinement, space group
C2/
m, and Z
= 2. The crystal contains two sets of oscillatory zones that appear to have developed during epitaxial growth. The unit-cell parameters obtained are
a = 10.24799(3) Å,
b = 13.42490(7) Å,
c = 4.755885(8) Å,
β = 105.1116(3)°, and
V = 631.680(4) Å
3. The empirical formula for erythrite, obtained with electron-probe micro-analysis (EPMA), is [Co
2.78Zn
0.11Ni
0.07Fe
0.04]
∑3.00(AsO
4)
2·8H
2O. Erythrite belongs to the vivianite-type structure that contains M1O
2(H
2O)
4 octahedra and M2
2O
6(H
2O)
4 octahedral dimers that are linked by TO
4 (T
5+ = As or P) tetrahedra to form complex layers parallel to the (010) plane. These layers are connected by hydrogen bonds. The average <M1–O>[6] = 2.122(1) Å and average <M2–O>[6] = 2.088(1) Å. With space group
C2/
m, there are two solid solutions: M
3(AsO
4)
2·8H
2O and M
3(PO
4)
2·8H
2O where M
2+ = Mg, Fe, Co, Ni, or Zn. In these As- and P-series, using data from this study and from the literature, we find that their structural parameters evolve linearly with
V and in a nearly parallel manner despite of the large difference in size between P
5+ (0.170 Å) and As
5+ (0.355 Å) cations. Average <T–O>[4], <M1–O>[6], and <M2–O>[6] distances increase linearly with
V. The average <As–O> distance is affected by M atoms, whereas the average <P–O> distance is unaffected because it contains shorter and stronger P–O bonds. Although As- and P-series occur naturally, there is no structural reason why similar V-series vivianite-group minerals do not occur naturally or cannot be synthesized.
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