Herman Cho
A.A Noyes Laboratory of Chemical Physics
California Institute of Technology
Pasadena, CA 91125
George R. Rossman
Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences
California Institute of Technology
Pasadena, CA 91125
Abstract
A detailed solid-state proton NMR study has been performed on garnets
containing low levels of OH (0.2-0.3 wt% as H2O),
including a colorless and a pale orange grossular sample from Asbestos,
Quebec, and a colorless grossular sample from LeLatema Hills, Tanzania.
Synthetic hydrogrossular powder, Ca3Al2(O4H4)3,
has been investigated as well. The NMR spectra of the three natural
crystals have a broad line (40 kHz) with a weak sharper feature
superimposed. Multiple-quantum spectra indicate that in the Tanzanian
garnet the dominant cluster size is two protons; in the colorless
grossular from Asbestos a mixture of two proton and four proton
clusters is in evidence; in the hydrogrossular powder, the cluster site
is four protons.
Solid echo envelope decay experiments show that for all the natural
samples a two-stop decay process occurs, implying the existence of two
distinct proton environments. The area rations indicate that the
spectrum of each of the natural crystals is dominated by a broad line
with a Gaussian shape and a line width that differs from the line width
of the synthetic hydrogrossular. In the case of the Tanzanian sample,
the broad band constitutes ~85% of the area in the NMR spectrum.
Moment analysis shows that although the
synthetic hydrogrossular has an average interproton separation of 2.16
Å in the interacting cluster, it is 1.60 Å
in the grossular.
American Mineralogist, Volume 78, pages
1149-1164, 1993