There has been much research undertaken on structural OH- in various nominally
anhydrous minerals including the common silicate garnets
(i.e., X3Y2Si3O12, where X = Mg, Fe2+, Mn2+ and Ca and Y = Al, Fe3+ and Cr3+). However,
it is still largely not understood where small concentrations of H atoms are incorporated in the garnet
crystal structure. In this work, the IR single-crystal spectra of end-member or approaching end-member composition andradite, pyrope and almandine crystals are measured. Both a natural
and synthetic andradite sample show a broad,
asymmetric OH-stretching mode at 3563 cm-1 that splits into two narrower
modes at lower temperatures. They are located
at 3575 cm-1 and 3557 cm-1 at 80 K with the higher wavenumber mode being considerably more intense compared
to that at lower energy.
These results are compared with published IR spectra of synthetic end-member katoite, pyrope and almandine also recorded at low temperature. These garnets show similar IR behavior with a single OH band at room temperature that splits into two at lower temperatures and with a similar intensity relationship as shown by andradite. It is argued that this behavior is indicative of the hydrogarnet substitution. The measured
natural almandine- and pyrope-rich (Dora Maira, Italy,
locality) crystals, on the other hand, show different
spectroscopic features with several OH modes that are not consistent with the hydrogarnet mechanism. An analysis
of the energy of the OH-stretching
mode is made for various
composition hydrogarnet clusters
(i.e., X3Y2(O4H4)3, where X = Mg,
Fe2+, Mn2+ and Ca and Y = Al and Fe3+) in terms of crystal-chemical properties and local atomic configurations. The OH mode, which lies between roughly
between 3660 and 3550 cm-1 at RT for various end-member garnets,
is a function of the mass of the X- and Y-cations due to mode coupling and/or
mixing. In addition,
the strength of the bonding
between the X- and Y-cations and the O anion
of the OH dipole plays
a role in affecting the wavenumber of the OH stretching vibration. OH mode broadening in end-member garnets
is primarily a result of thermal anharmonic disorder, especially with regard to the light H cation.
OH mode broadening in intermediate solid-solution composition garnets is a function
of both thermal
effects and variations in local atomic configurations around the OH dipole(s) in the crystal
structure. Published IR spectra of certain high-pressure pyrope-rich garnets, both synthetic and natural, are analyzed and arguments made that OH can often
be incorporated as the hydrogarnet substitution. IR spectra similar in appearance, having
multiple relatively narrow
OH modes but distinct from those indicating
the hydrogarnet substitution, can be observed
for certain synthetic end-member and
various composition natural
pyropes from Dora Maira and some natural
spessartines. This indicates that other common
OH substitution mechanisms, which have yet to be determined, can also
occur in silicate garnet.