Cation and anion ordering in synthetic lepidolites and lithian muscovites: inﬂuence of the OH / F and Li / Al ratios on the mica formation studied by NMR (nuclear magnetic resonance) spectroscopy and X-ray diffraction

. A large number of lepidolites K(Li x Al 3 − x )[Si 2 x Al 4 − 2 x O 10 ](OH) y F 2 − y and Li-muscovites K(Li x Al 2 − x/ 3 (cid:3) 1 − 2 x/ 3 )[Si 3 AlO 10 ](OH) y F 2 − y were synthesised by a gelling method in combination with hydrothermal syntheses at a pressure of 2 kbar and a temperature of 873 K. The nominal composition ranged be-tween 0 . 0 ≤ x ≤ 2 . 0 and 0 . 0 ≤ y ≤ 2 . 0, i.e. from polylithionite K[Li 2 . 0 Al][Si 4 . 0 O 10 ](OH) y F 2 − y over trilithionite K[Li 1 . 5 Al 1 . 5 ][AlSi 3 . 0 O 10 ](OH) y F 2 − y to muscovite K[Al 2 . 0 (cid:3) ][AlSi 3 . 0 O 10 ](OH) y F 2 − y . 1 H, 19 F, 29 Si and 27 Al magic-angle spinning nuclear magnetic resonance (MAS NMR


Introduction
Micas are widespread minerals that are formed under various conditions and occur in almost all types of rocks.A special feature is the ability to incorporate considerable amounts of fluorine into the crystal structure.Fluorine is an incompatible element that accumulates during continuous crystallisation in the melt.Even small amounts of fluorine influence the physical properties of the melt.An increasing F content causes an increase in water solubility (Holtz et al., 1993) and a decrease in solidus temperature (Manning, 1981).Therefore, it is necessary to gain a deeper understanding of the partitioning processes of fluorine between the mineral and the coexisting melt.This includes not only studies of phase equilibria, partition coefficients and thermal stability of mica, but also investigations of the local F environment in F-bearing phases.
The mica mineral phlogopite shows a notable ability to take up fluorine in the division of phyllosilicate minerals.This property is only surpassed by the lepidolites within the class of mica minerals (Foster, 1960).The fluorine incorporation in micas is dependent on the Al content of the mineral: the less aluminium is present in the crystal structure, the higher the ability to replace OH with F (Langner and Fechtelkord, 2012).Therefore, it is necessary to investigate the capability of fluorine incorporation into the crystal structure of the lepidolites and lithium muscovites.Robert et al. (1993), Papin et al. (1997) and Boukili et al. (2001) found that F strongly prefers micas with trioctahedral environments.Hydroxyl groups with high OH bond strengths can be easily substituted by F. In contrast, in dioctahedral sites the hydroxyl proton is involved in hydrogen bonds with O atoms from the adjacent tetrahedral sheet.As it is acting as a dipole rather than a sphere-like anion, a replacement by fluorine is difficult (Robert et al., 1993).In their IR spectroscopic study, Papin et al. (1997) demonstrated that the OH/F distribution in Al-rich phlogopite is not statistically random but that the F atoms prefer Mg 2 Al coordination and the hydroxyl groups prefer Mg 3 coordination.These findings agree with the 19 F, 1 H and 29 Si magic-angle spinning nuclear magnetic resonance (MAS NMR) study of Langner and Fechtelkord (2012).Boukili et al. (2002) investigated the relationship between F content and cation distribution over octahedral sites.They concluded that F-OH substitution is controlled in micas by the geometric adjustment of tetrahedral and octahedral layers, not by Al-F or Fe-F bond strength.
Solid-state NMR spectroscopy is an ideal tool to obtain structural data, complementing X-ray diffraction studies.Al-though only a few solid-state NMR studies have dealt with the structural incorporation of F in aluminosilicate glasses and layered silicates, they have made a large contribution to the understanding of the structural compositions.Kohn et al. (1991) and Schaller et al. (1992) determined AlF 3− 6 complexes in F-containing glasses by NMR spectroscopy.As a result, the formation of AlF 3− 6 complexes explains the increasing depolymerisation and thus the decreasing viscosity of the melt with increasing F content (e.g.Dingwell et al., 1987).Usually, Al is bonded to O atoms at the tetrahedral sites within the glass framework.When F complexes are introduced, they displace the Al atoms from the framework.Langner et al. (2012) showed that different ordering schemes can be found in the tetrahedral and octahedral sheets of phlogopite: in the tetrahedral sheet ordering patterns are dominated by short-range ordering in order to avoid the formation of Al-O-Al linkages following Loewenstein's rule (Loewenstein, 1954).Long-range ordering is only present at Al content close to Si/ [4] Al = 1 : 1, with Al and Si occupying the tetrahedra alternately.For the octahedral layer an Al-O-Al avoidance similar to the tetrahedral layers has been found, and Al is always surrounded by six Mg ions in the neighbouring octahedra.There is a relationship between the ordering in both types of sheets in that Al atoms in the octahedral and the tetrahedral sheets tend to be located next to each other, forming Al-rich clusters in the structure.
Although the amount of F in the initial oxide mixture did not change the Al content of the synthesised phlogopites, it had a strong influence on the number of impurity phases formed during synthesis.It has been found that high amounts of F prevented extensive formation of Al-rich phlogopites and vice versa, resulting in a formation of K 3 AlF 6 q 0.5H 2 O instead of phlogopite (in addition to Al 2 O 3 ).This effect has been observed not only for F-rich samples and higher Al contents, but also for extremely Al-rich compositions even if the amount of F was very low (Langner and Fechtelkord, 2012).
In this study, we continued our previous studies of the influence of the OH/F content on the formation of Al-rich phlogopites (Langner and Fechtelkord, 2012;Langner et al., 2012), focussing on Li-rich micas.A large number of synthetic lepidolites and Li-muscovites have been synthesised with a composition ranging from Li-rich polylithionites and trilithionites to Al-rich muscovites.The synthesis of lepidolites and Li-muscovites along the two corresponding binary lines and the subsequent X-ray diffraction (XRD) investigation revealed miscibility gaps and allowed us to identify occurring polytypes.The influence of incorporated OH/F anions was checked by modifying the nominal content in the synthesis mixture.To investigate the local ordering of cations and anions in the octahedral and tetrahedral layers according to the chemical composition, NMR spectroscopic investigations have been performed.It is possible to determine the composition of the synthesised micas by 29 Si, 1 H and 19 F MAS NMR spectroscopy. 29Si MAS NMR experiments allowed us to calculate the Si/Al ratio of tetrahedral sheets of the crystalline product (Langner and Fechtelkord, 2012).The Li content x est can be calculated from the determined tetrahedral Si/Al ratio of the 29 Si MAS NMR signals.The ordering of Li/Al and OH/F in the octahedral sheets was investigated using 19 F, 1 H and 27 Al MAS NMR spectroscopy to determine whether the preference of F for Mg and of OH for Al reported in phlogopite (Langner and Fechtelkord, 2012) also applies to lepidolite and lithium muscovite.In addition, 27 Al multiple-quantum magic-angle spinning (MQMAS) NMR experiments helped to resolve the aluminium signals more precisely and identify possible emerging secondary phases.
Furthermore, X-ray diffraction experiments enabled the identification of impurity phases and polytypes and the analysis of stacking disorder of the mica phases.Scanning electron microscopy gave information about the crystal sizes of the mica phases and the impurities.

Background
Lepidolite and lithium muscovite belong to the phyllosilicates.All micas consist of interconnected tetrahedraloctahedral-tetrahedral layers forming TOT blocks which are stacked along the c axis and which are separated from each other by interlayer cations.The T sites of the tetrahedral layers are occupied with silicon and aluminium and the octahedral layers contain lithium and aluminium or a vacancy, while the interlayer cation is potassium.Each octahedral position is coordinated by four oxygen atoms belonging to the tetrahedral layer and two OH − or F − anions in either cisor trans-coordination.The structure is shown in Fig. S1 in the Supplement.The endmembers trilithionite and polylithionite exhibit a trioctahedral structure with every octahedral position being occupied.Muscovite is a dioctahedral mineral, which contains a vacancy on one out of three octahedral positions.
Natural and synthetic micas are characterised by different chemical compositions and structures that comprise several polytypes.Early researchers suggest a simple correlation between the Li content and the occurrence of polytypes (Levinson, 1953;Foster, 1960).Natural lepidolites crystallise in the polytypes 1M, 2M 2 , 3T, 3M 2 and 2M 1 (Foster, 1960;Koval' et al., 1975;Bailey and Christie, 1978;Černý et al., 1970); the frequency of occurrence for the most important polytypes is (1M, 2M 2 ) > 3T 2M 1 (Pandey et al., 1982).The polytypes described for synthetic micas involve 1M and 2M 1 and 2M 2 type mixed with 2M 1 (Munoz, 1968).Systematic studies of natural lithium micas from different locations show no direct relationship between the occurrence of polytypes and mica composition, besides the two exceptions of a high proportion of the 2M 1 polytype in the dioctahedral lithium muscovite and 1M and 2M 2 polytypes in the trioctahedral lepidolite (Heinrich, 1967;Chaudry and Howie, 1973;Černý and Burt, 1984).It indicates that not only the mica composition but also P -T conditions, volatile phases, degree of saturation and rate of cooling are determining the stability and occurrence of lepidolite polytypes (e.g.Sartori, 1976;Swanson and Bailey, 1981;Chaudry and Howie, 1973).Structural aspects regarding compositions of the octahedral and tetrahedral sheets, polytypes and possible miscibility gaps along the substitutions in the polylithionite-trilithionite-muscovite binary line are still unclear.
Muscovite has already been synthesised several times using different methods.Noll (1932) produced OH-bearing muscovite using gel close to the required composition.The synthesis was accomplished at 225-300 • C and 26-90 bar with a duration of 5 d.Gruner (1939Gruner ( , 1944) ) synthesised muscovite from a reaction mixture of Al(OH) 3 , silica and KCl in HCl solutions (400 • C, 350 bar, duration 5 d).Another successful synthesis of muscovite is the recrystallisation from its decomposition products reported by Gruner (1929) and Rov (1949).Gruner (1929) obtained "kaliophilite" with muscovite grown on it by decomposing natural muscovite with 0.5 M KOH in a bomb at 400 • C. Rov (1949) heated muscovite up to 1050 • C until only α-Al 2 O 3 or spinel was observed.By treating the sample at 400-650 • C and 69-690 bar for 12-100 h, muscovite could be observed.
2 Experimental methods

Synthesis
Polylithionite-trilithionite solid solutions (lepidolites) with nominal compositions K(Li x Al 3−x )[Al 4−2x Si 2x O 10 ](OH) y F 2−y (1.5 ≤ x ≤ 2.0; 0.0 ≤ y ≤ 2.0) and lithium muscovites with nominal compositions K(Li x Al 2−x/3 1−2x/3 [AlSi 3 O 10 ](OH) y F 2−y (0.0 ≤ x < 1.5; 0.0 ≤ y ≤ 2.0) (Fig. 1) (composition of the oxidic start mixtures) were synthesised by a gelling method following Hamilton and Henderson (1968) in combination with hydrothermal syntheses.Figure 1 shows the phase diagram of the dioctahedral muscovite, the trioctahedral trilithionite and the trioctahedral polylithionite and oxidic ternary diagram containing the synthesised sample compositions.The starting compositions are listed in Table 1.High reactive oxide mixtures were prepared with 1 M solution of KNO 3 (NORMAPUR, 26869.291),Al(NO 3 ) 3 q 9H 2 O (Merck, 1.01086.1000),Li(NO 3 ) (abcr, AB203314, 99 %) and NH 4 F (Merck, 1.01164.0250)and filled in Teflon containers according to the required composition.Tetraethylorthosilicate was added as a source of silicon.A homogenous solution was achieved by adding ethanol (Fisher chemical, E/0650DF/17) and distilled water.Ammonia solution (Sigma-Aldrich, 05002-1L, 30 %-33 % NH 3 in H 2 O) starts the gel process until the solution became alkaline.This solution was stirred for a further 15 min and then placed under a fume hood for 24 h.The samples were stirred again after 24 h and dried in an oven at 353.15 K for 1 d to volatilise the ethanol and residual ammonia.After that, the solution was stirred again and dried for 72 h at 393.15 K to volatilise the added water.The resulting platelets were crushed and heated in a platinum crucible at about 1073.15K over a Bunsen burner until no further smoke was detected to drive off water, ethanol, ammonia and nitrogen oxides.The oxides were resorbed, and XRD experiments were made to test for possible crystalline phases.Only oxides, which were X-ray amorphous, were used in the syntheses, filled, and sealed in gold capsules with 9 wt % to 11 wt % distilled water.The correct sealing was controlled by placing the capsule at 393 K in an oven and checking for weight losses.The capsules are 4 cm long, possess an outer diameter of 4 mm, and have a wall thickness of 0.25 and 0.2 mm.A vertically hydrothermal system was used for the synthesis with Tuttletype pressure vessels (Tuttle, 1949;Luth and Tuttle, 1963) and an external oven.The capsules were placed in the pressure vessels and fixed with a NiCr fill bar.This prevents circulation of water and minimises the amount of the water needed as the pressure medium.A Ni/NiCr thermocouple measured the temperature during the synthesis.The samples were synthesised at p = 2 kbar and T = 873 K over a week (error: p = 50 bar and T = 20 K along the capsules).After the run duration, samples were quenched by removing them from the furnace and cooling in air at constant pressure.Isobaric heat-up and quenching times were about 1 h, which is assumed to be negligible compared to the overall run durations.The value of f O 2 was close to that imposed by the Ni-NiO buffer.The synthesised samples were dried in an oven at 393 K for 24 h.

X-ray diffraction
For phase identification, powder X-ray diffraction (XRD) experiments were carried out on a PANalytical theta-theta powder diffractometer equipped with a Cu Kα radiation source (λ = 1.5418Å) in a 2θ range of 4 to 65 • with a step size of 0.013 • 2θ .
For structural studies, high-resolution XRD patterns were recorded using a Siemens D5000 diffractometer with Cu Kα 1 radiation (λ = 1.54060Å, 45 kV, 40 mA), a Johansson Ge(111) monochromator and a Braun position-sensitive detector (6 • coverage).The measured range was 4 to 90 • 2θ with a step size of 0.0078 • 2θ .Additionally, a STOE STADI MP diffractometer equipped with a Johansson Ge(111) monochromator (wavelength: 1.54060 Å, 40 kV, 40 mA) and a Mythen K1 position-sensitive detector (18 • coverage) was used.The measured range was 5 to 95 • 2θ , with a step size of 0.015 • 2θ .The samples were prepared in borosilicate glass capillaries with a diameter of 0.03 mm to prevent preferred orientation of the micas for both diffractometers.
To analyse the samples with respect to the presence of impurity phases and of several structurally closely related mica polytypes, the samples were measured using synchrotron radiation at the beamline P08 at PETRA III, DESY, Hamburg, Germany.The wavelength for the experiment was λ = 1.378Å.The intense synchrotron beam is in particular suitable to detect even very weak reflections.
The three samples obtained after different synthesis times have also been measured using synchrotron radiation.

Structure refinement
The structures were refined using the FullProf 2K program (Rodríguez-Carvajal, 1993, 2001) with scattering factors as implemented there.No absorption correction was necessary.For the Rietveld refinement, soft distance restraints were used: d(Si [4] .00(4) Å; nine additional parameters had to be used to describe the anisotropic peak widths.To obtain informative occupancy factors of Li and Al atoms from samples containing structurally closely related mica polytypes which, in addition, are somewhat disordered, specific care had to be taken.Since displacement parameter and occupancy factor of an atom are highly correlated in a structure refinement based on powder data, isotropic displacement parameters were fixed for cations (Li, Al, Si, K) and anions (O, OH, F) at crystal chemically meaningful values: B iso (cations) = 0.9 Å 2 , B iso (anions) = 1.8 Å 2 .

Scanning electron microscopy
To investigate the crystal shapes and sizes of the samples and to characterise the impurity phases, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) measurements in combination with energydispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX) analyses have been performed.For the experiments, a ZEISS -Gemini2 -Merlin HR-FESEM (high-resolution-field emission scanning electron microscopy) microscope with an acceleration voltage of 4 to 20 kV was used.The samples were gold-coated before investigation.

Nuclear magnetic resonance
The NMR spectra were recorded on a Bruker ASX 400 NMR spectrometer and a Bruker Avance NEO 400 NMR spectrometer.The 29 Si MAS NMR measurements have been performed at 79.49 MHz with a standard Bruker 7 mm MAS probe and a sample rotation frequency of 4 kHz.The experiments were carried out with a single pulse duration of 4 µs (the length of the 90 • pulse was 6.5 µs (Bruker Avance Neo) and 5.8 µs (Bruker ASX)), 10 s recycle delay and a spectral width of 20 kHz.A total of 700-30 000 scans were accumulated.Tetramethylsilane was used as the reference standard https://doi.org/10.5194/ejm-35-199-2023 for 29 Si and 1 H MAS NMR measurements, which were taken at 400.13 MHz, with a pulse length of 2 µs (90 • pulse length 5.3 µs (Bruker ASX) and 90 • pulse length 3.0 µs (Bruker Avance Neo)) with a repetition time of 10 s.Selected spectra were measured with longer repetition times to ensure that the short times are sufficient to obtain the desired signals.
The spectral width was 125 kHz, and a total of 128 scans were added up.
In 19 F MAS NMR experiments, 300 scans were recorded at 376.51 MHz and a rotation frequency of 12.5, 15 and 35 kHz.The faster speeds were chosen due to overlaps of a signal in the MAS NMR measurement with the rotation sidebands.The spectral width was 125 kHz and the pulse length was 4 µs (90 • pulse length 4.0 µs (Bruker ASX)) and 2.08 µs (90 • pulse length 7.1 µs (Bruker Avance Neo)).The repetition time was 10 s (Bruker ASX) and 15 s (Bruker Avance Neo).As an external standard, p-C 6 H 4 F 2 was used, and the parts per million scale was calibrated to −120 ppm.
In the case of 19 F and 1 H MAS NMR investigation, the empty rotor was measured, and the spectra were subtracted as a background measurement from the sample spectra due to extensive background signals.As a result, the broad signal from the rotor environment was eliminated.It was based on, for example, cables and glue and on the probe head stator, a BN stator containing hydrogen atoms and a Teflon heat shield containing fluorine.
The 27 Al MAS NMR experiments were taken at 104.27 MHz and a rotation frequency of 12.5 kHz.A molar aqueous solution of AlCl 3 (aq) was used as the external standard.A total of 25 000 scans were performed with a spectral width of 125 kHz, a pulse length of 0.6 µs (90 • pulse length 3.5 µs (Bruker Avance Neo) and 3.8 µs (Bruker ASX)) and a repetition time of 0.1 s.
The 27 Al MQMAS investigations were evaluated as splitt 1 -whole-echo experiments.The spectral width has been reduced to 50 kHz for the F 2 direction.The 90 • pulse lengths were 3.3 µs for the excitation pulse and 10 µs for the doublefrequency sweep (DFS) conversion pulse.An initial delay between the two pulses of 1 µs was chosen.After the conversion pulse, a delay of 2.79 ms was chosen to allow the full echo to build up after the 20 µs selective 180 • soft pulse.For each experiment, an F 1 increment of 40 µs was selected, and 192 scans were added with 96 transients.The DFS started at an offset of 50 kHz and ended at 1 MHz; the frequency resolution was 50 ns.The labelling of the F 1 axis follows Cz but is inverted due to the echo acquisition convention (Millot and Man, 2002).

Fitting of NMR spectra
All NMR spectra were fitted with mixed Lorentzian-Gaussian lineshapes including convolution using the Dmfit 2022 program (Massiot et al., 2002).Some 27 Al MAS NMR lineshapes partially show a distribution of quadrupolar parameters in their signal components.These resonances were fitted by the introduction of a Gaussian distribution of the quadrupolar coupling (dispersion) and a subsequent summation of the computed weighted signal components (amorphous Cz simple model).Tolerances (estimated standard deviations) were estimated by varying the line position and linewidth in the fit function, observing the statistical χ 2 function until a distinct change of χ 2 took place.
3 Results and discussion 3.1 Characterisation of samples and impurity phases by X-ray powder diffraction and scanning electron microscopy Table 1 presents the composition of oxidic reaction mixtures used to perform a large number of different synthesis experiments of mica phases along the binary lines muscovitetrilithionite and trilithionite-polylithionite: Li-muscovites A detailed analysis of the sample compositions was possible on the basis of the XRD powder data.The presence and the total number of impurity phases give a first hint at the "willingness" of the mica phases to crystallise from a particular reaction mixture.Moreover, the knowledge of the phase composition of each sample is helpful to interpret the corresponding NMR spectra.
The phase composition and the crystallisation of impurity phases may depend on the synthesis time.Thus, the synthesis time of a selected experiment (x = 0.0, y = 1.6) was diversified from a standard of 7 to 3 or 14 d, respectively.The three corresponding diffraction patterns present no significant differences.It only seems that the crystallinity is slightly better after 14 d.The reflections are slightly sharper, and several very weak reflections that appear in the other two diagrams are missing.However, the differences are not significant enough to justify doubling the synthesis time.All other samples were prepared with a synthesis time of 7 d.
No additional phases occur with increasing Li and F content x = 0.3y = 1.4,x = 0.6y = 1.2, x = 0.9y = 1.0 and x = 1.2y = 0.0.It seems that there is an optimal composition for a Li content and a corresponding F content.
Prior to the structure analyses, synchrotron powder diffraction diagrams of eight selected samples were recorded to get a first impression of the complexity of the envisaged analyses shown in Fig. S2.In nearly all cases, a series of weak reflections are visible, which indicate that either several mica polytypes are present or the mica phase is charac-terised by a stacking disordered structure.Reflections originating from a secondary mica are marked by ↓ in the upper and lower diagram.The main phase is always polytype 1M.The small additional reflections can be assigned to the polytype 2M 1 .The intensity of the small reflections shows no correlation to the chemical composition.
The samples exhibit very small sizes of the mica crystals, ranging from 0.1 up to 5 µm (Fig. 2).The polylithionite samples show the largest crystals.With increasing Al content, the crystal sizes decrease.Muscovite yields larger crystals.The crystals show, typical for micas, the cleavage along the (001) plane and a platy habit.SEM images (e.g.Fig. 2) show that some platelets have a pseudo-hexagonal outline and that the platelets are more commonly aggregated into clusters.
It was possible to distinguish between the micas and some impurity phases.The crystallite sizes of the impurity phases were larger (up to 130 µm) and were finally identified with EDX measurements (energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy) and X-ray diffraction analysis.A list of the phase compositions of the samples is given in Tables 2 and 3. Figure 3 illustrates the optimal, sufficient and inadequate oxide compositions of the reaction mixture to form micas. Seemingly, there is an optimal chemical composition for the mica synthesis.Fewer additional phases occur with a lithium content between 2.0 and 1.5, combined with a high F content.The trilithionite samples can be synthesised without any additional phases up to an OH content of y = 0.6.With decreasing Li content (x ≤ 1.2) and increasing OH content, the proportion of impurity phases decreases.The muscovite samples without Li show fewer impurity phases with an OH content y ≥ 1.6.
Along the trilithionite-polylithionite line (K(Li x Al 3−x ) [Al 4−2x Si 2x O 10 ](OH) y F 2−y ; 1.5 ≤ x ≤ 2.0), fewer secondary phases are observed with a higher fluorine content (y = 0.0 and 0.2).At ratios higher than y = 0.2, eucryptite and sanidine are the most common impurity phases.Additionally, quartz, leucite, lithium metasilicate and lithium disilicate are present in lower amounts (Table 2).With increasing OH content, the number of additional phases increases.In this work, synthesised trilithionites can occur up to y = 0.6 without additional phases in agreement with experiments of Munoz (1968).With an increasing Li content, the impurity phases are present even at lower OH contents (e.g.x = 1.6, y = 0.4; x = 1.7, y = 0.2).Polylithionite without any impurity phases crystalises only without any OH content.In contrast, no mica phases are present along the binary line between trilithionite and polylithionite without F content.Small amounts of fluorine (y = 1.8) are sufficient to produce mica phases.
The Li-muscovites (K(Li x Al 2−x/3 1−2x/3 )[AlSi 3 O 10 ] (OH) y F 2−y ; 0.0 ≤ x ≤ 1.5) show the opposite behaviour due to their dioctahedral structure (Table 3); the incorporation of hydroxyl groups is energetically more favourable for Limuscovites than for lepidolites since the OH bond can point to the vacancy of the structure.The muscovite crystallises Nevertheless, it is possible to synthesise the phyllosilicates under the specified conditions for most compositions.Only the lepidolites without any fluorine and muscovites without any OH could not be synthesised.The results are consistent with Munoz (1968), who reported the successful synthesis of polylithionite and polytrilithionite in a fluorine-rich syshttps://doi.org/10.5194/ejm-35-199-2023Table 2. List of phases as determined by X-ray diffraction for the nominal compositions of the reaction mixtures along the polylithionite (Pln)-trilithionite (Tln) join.The various phases are listed in order of relative quantity.Products with mica as major phase are printed in bold letters.Symbols -Qz: SiO 2 (quartz), Ecp: eucryptite, Sa: sanidine, l 2 s: Li 2 SiO 3 , Lct: leucite, l 2 s 2 : Li 2 Si 2 O 5 (lithium disilicate).Some impurity phases which could not be identified are marked with (?). y\x 1.5 (Tln) 1 tem, but no polylithionite or polytrilithionite, when fluorine is completely substituted by hydroxyl.Eucryptite, sanidine and quartz are the most common impurity phases; Li 2 SiO 3 , Li 2 Si 2 O 5 , KAlF 4 , topaz and leucite rarely occur, in agreement with Munoz (1968).

Structure refinements
Structure refinements of the Li-muscovites and lepidolites were carried out to investigate structural changes, to investigate the occurrence of different polytypes, and to obtain reliable occupancy factors for octahedrally coordinated Al and Li.It was, however, not possible to distinguish between OH − and F − and between tetrahedrally coordinated Al and Si due to very similar scattering curves.Occupancy factors of OH − , F − , [4] Al and [4] Si were fixed at values which reflect the composition of the reaction mixture.Almost all investigated samples exhibit weak reflections in addition to the ones of polytype 1M, indicating that two different polytypes 1M and 2M 1 are present.These weak reflections are marked by black arrows in Figs.S2 and 4 (right).Twelve Rietveld refinements were carried out, taking into account a mixture of two mica phases (and additional impurity phases if necessary).The structure refinement was performed assuming that the domains of the 1M and the 2M 1 polytypes are large enough to consider them as separate crystals.In this case, two calculated diffractograms add up to the observed one.The anisotropic halfwidths of the reflections, however, indicate that some stacking disorder exists.This was covered in the refinement by using nine additional profile parameters.It was necessary to refine the 1M structure in space group C2 due to three different occupancies of octahedral sites M1, M2 and M3; the related centrosymmetric space group C2/m allows only for two independent M sites.
Table 3. List of phases as determined by X-ray diffraction for the nominal compositions of the reaction mixtures along the trilithionitemuscovite join.The various phases are listed in order of relative quantity.Products with mica as major phase are printed in bold letters.Symbols -Qz: SiO 2 (quartz), Ecp: eucryptite, Sa: sanidine, Lct: leucite, l 2 s 2 : Li 2 Si 2 O 5 lithium disilicate, tpz: topaz.Some impurity phases which could not be identified are marked with (?In total, the structures of six lepidolites were refined including the octahedral occupancy of both polytypes (see Table 4).With the exception of trilithionite, all lepidolites crystallise as a mixture of two different polytypes with distinctly different chemical compositions.The samples show a clear distribution between a Li-rich 1M polytype and an Al-rich 2M 1 polytype.According to the refined occupancy factors, the compositions of both polytypes change with the changing Li/Al ratio of the reaction mixture.Starting from a polylithionite composition (polytype 1M with Li/Al = 2.0 / 1.0 and polytype 2M 1 with Li/Al = 0.0 / 2.0) the distribution of lithium and aluminium approaches the composition of trilithionite with idealised Li/Al = 1.5 / 1.5.This indicates that the lepidolites represent a solid solution series with polylithionite and trilithionite as the endmembers.
In addition, the ratios of polytypes vary.The higher the Al content of the reaction mixture, the higher the portion of Alrich polytype 2M 1 (see Table 1).It is noticeable that the lepidolite samples contain hardly any impurity phases (Table 4), probably because lepidolite crystals of various compositions can form.
The octahedral sites M1 and M2 of the 1M polytype of the lepidolites are preferentially occupied by lithium, while the M3 site is preferentially occupied by aluminium.The 2M 1 polytype incorporates Li predominantly at the octahedral site M1 and Al at M2.
The trilithionite sample K(Li 1.5 Al 1.5 )[AlSi 3 O 10 ](OH) 1 F 1 is an exception, as it exhibits only one polytype 1M (97 %) and a small amount of eucryptite (3 %) as an impurity phase (Fig. 4a).The sample having a nominal composition of x = 1.5 and y = 1.0 shows no additional peaks which would reflect considerable stacking disorder or a second polytype 2M 1 .
Furthermore, Rietveld refinements of six Li-muscovite samples were carried out.In the series of Li-muscovites, the occupancy factor of Al at the octahedral site M2 in polytype 2M 1 refined for all samples to slightly higher values than 1 (two Al per formula unit).The occupancy factor was, https://doi.org/10.5194/ejm-35-199-2023therefore, fixed to the maximum of 1.0.Still, the refinement showed also a little electron density at site M1.Since the potassium site was in all samples not fully occupied, it is assumed that some Li + occupies site M1 for charge compensation leading to formula K 1−z (Li z Al 2 )(Si 3 AlO 10 )(OH) y F 2−y , with z about 0.1.
All samples from x = 0.0 to x = 1.2 consist of both polytypes 1M and 2M 1 with 1M/2M 1 ratios from 0.9 to 2.4 (Table 4).For those samples that did not contain impurity phases the 1M/2M 1 ratio is 1.3.In the case of the Li-muscovites the 1M/2M 1 ratio depends obviously on the number of impurity phases depleting the reaction mixture of Li (eucryptite) or Al (sanidine or amorphous).It is important to note that there is no solid solution between trilithionite and muscovite; instead, the crystals of the Li-muscovites consist of domains of muscovite and trilithionite of different ratios (see Table 4).Grew et al. (2018) illustrated fine layering in lepidolite at high magnification.That might be a natural analogue of our findings for synthetic micas.The refinements of the occupancy factors of the individual octahedrally coordinated sites show that lithium prefers the M1 and M2 sites in polytype 1M and contains aluminium preferentially at M3.The polytype 2M 1 includes hardly any lithium and possesses M2 sites fully occupied by aluminium.
It is noticeable that higher numbers of additional phases occur in samples with a chemical composition between muscovite and trilithionite because the crystallisation of layered silicates was effectively blocked (Table 3).
These structure refinements are only good approximations.The fact that nine additional profile parameters had to be used to describe the anisotropy of peak halfwidths leads to the conclusion that the different layers show noticeable stacking disorder, which is a common phenomenon of layered silicates.The Rietveld refinements of the Li-muscovites exhibit higher χ 2 values (see Table S1 in the Supplement), indicating that stacking disorder is more pronounced, and the assumption of two different crystalline domains of the 1M and the 2M 1 polytypes is, therefore, justified to a lesser extent.
The lattice metrics of all samples are shown in Tables S1  (1M) and S2 (2M 1 ).The refined lattice parameters fit well compared to literature values.Analysing the lattice metrics in more detail a different behaviour of lepidolites and Limuscovites becomes obvious: the lattice parameters a and b and the β angle of the Li-muscovites (x = 0.0 to 1.2) vary in a non-uniform way and do not show a systematic change with chemical composition of the materials as shown in Figs. 5  and 6 for the Li-muscovites.Also, there is no systematic change of the unit cell volume of the Li-muscovites with chemical composition of the mica crystals.
In contrast, the lattice parameters a, b and c of the lepidolites (x = 1.5 to 2.0) decrease systematically from trilithionite (x = 1.5) to polylithionite (x = 2.0) for both polytypes (see Figs. 5 and 6 and Tables S1 and S2, upper part).As a result, the unit cell volumes of the lepidolites shrink with increasing Li content.
These findings can be rationalised as follows: for OHricher samples (trilithionite) the lattice parameter c is higher than for F-rich samples (polylithionite).In OH-rich samples, the proton directly points towards the interlayer cation K + leading to a strong repulsion and a widening of the distance between adjacent layer packages.In the tetrahedral layers, aluminium is substituted by silicon.Due to the smaller ionic radius of silicon (Si-O bond 1.62 Å) compared to aluminium (Al-O bond 1.76 Å), the lateral dimensions of the whole structure decrease within the a, b plane.Therefore, the volume of the unit cell of both polytypes decreases with increasing Li content.This agrees well with the fact that the lepidolites form solid solutions (see above) while Li-muscovites do not.

29 Si MAS NMR experiments
29 Si MAS NMR spectra of all samples were recorded to investigate the local environments of the Si atoms in the structure.According to the mica structure, there are three possible silicon environments for the lithium muscovites and lepidolites and thus up to three 29 Si MAS NMR signals: 1Al) and Q 3 (2Al) signal.Signals are assigned using the Q n (xAl) nomenclature, where n is equal to the number of bonded oxygens between silicon atoms and next neighbours (n = 3 for layer silicates), and x is the number of Al atoms bonded to silicon.Along the binary line between muscovite and trilithionite (see Fig. 1), the tetrahedral composition is [Si 3 Al].The relative proportion of Q 3 types should be 25 % Q 3 (0Al), 50 % Q 3 (1Al) and 25 % Q 3 (2Al) and is reflected by the intensities of the NMR signals.Between trilithionite and polylithionite, the Si/Al ratio changes from [Si 3 Al] to [Si 4 ].Consequently, the polylithionite sam- Table 4. Results of the Rietveld refinements.OC: total charge of the three octahedral sites, SG: space group, p.f.u.: per formula unit, Qz: SiO 2 (quartz), Ecp: eucryptite, Sa: sanidine, Pln: polylithionite, Tln: trilithionite, LEP: lepidolite, Ms: muscovite, Li-Ms: lithium muscovite, tpz: topaz.S1.The error margins are less than the width of the data symbols.
Figure 6.Lattice metric of the polytype 2M 1 of selected lepidolite and Li-muscovite samples adapted from Table S1.The error margins are less than the width of the data symbols.ples should show only one signal belonging to the Q 3 (0Al) environment.
The 29 Si MAS NMR spectra show the three expected signals (Fig. 7).The polylithionite spectra exhibit one defined signal at −89 ppm belonging to the Q 3 (0Al) environment.When the lithium content decreases, a second signal at −86 ppm and a third signal at −83 ppm appear and increase according to the Q 3 (1Al) environment and the Q 3 (2Al) environment, respectively.Thus, the ratio of the three samples in the trilithionite sample is 1 : 2 : 1 in line with expectations.
The content of [4] Al and thus the Si/Al ratio of the tetrahedral sheets can be determined indirectly from the subsequent 29 Si signals.The Li content in the octahedral layer of lepidolites (between trilithionite and polylithionite) depends on the Si/Al ratio.Therefore, it is possible to calculate the Li content x est from the determined Si/Al ratio of the 29 Si MAS NMR spectra with Si , (1) which gives the experimental compositions of the lepidolites.The calculated Li contents x est of samples between polylithionite and trilithionite agree with the expected val- ues.F-rich samples show slightly increased values and the OH-richer samples lower values (Fig. 8a).
The composition of the tetrahedral layer is constant between trilithionite and muscovite.Thus, the ratio of the three signals in the 29 Si MAS NMR spectra should not change.The exact Li content cannot be determined.The estimated Si/Al ratio plotted against the nominal x content is also given in Fig. 8b.Li-muscovite samples with a high fluorine content show a higher Si/Al ratio than expected in contrast to the OH-rich samples with lower values.F-rich lepidolites indicate higher Li contents and OH-rich samples lower Li contents, which can be explained by the preference of Al to OH and F to Li as described in the 1 H and 19 F MAS NMR section.
Interestingly, the OH/F content has influence on the 29 Si MAS NMR signals (Fig. S3).The spectra of lepidolites with a nominal Li content of x = 1.7 show no large deviation from 0.0 ≤ y ≤ 0.8.With increasing OH content the 29 Si MAS NMR Q 3 (1Al) and Q 3 (2Al) signals of the lepidolite decrease and disappear; only the Q 3 (0Al) remains and vanishes also at high OH contents.Several signals referring to impurity phases occur.The fluorine anions prefer the incorporation next to Si-and Li-rich environments.The remaining Q 3 (0Al) signal indicates the formation of pure polylithionite (K(Li 2 Al)[Si 4 O 10 ]F 2 ) for the remaining fluorine.The incorporation of OH in a trioctahedral structure is energetically unfavourable.While a high fluorine content of the reaction mixture led predominantly to mica phases with the expected Si/Al ratio, an increase of OH led to the crystallisation of impurity phases like sanidine, eucryptite and Li 2 SiO 3 , and the less available fluorine will be incorporated near Si-rich environments in polylithionite.

1 H and 19 F MAS NMR experiments
Each OH anion is coordinating three octahedral cations, either Li or Al.In trioctahedral micas, the OH bond is nearly perpendicular to (001), but it can be tilted in lepidolites (Robert et al., 1989).Thus, three signals should emerge, the Li 2 Al environment, the LiAl 2 and the Al 2 environment.If only the spectra with the same Li but different OH content are considered, it is noticeable that the intensity of the LiAl 2 signal decreases with increasing OH content, although the ratio between Li 2 Al and LiAl 2 environment should be constant (Fig. 10a).This is analogous to the 1 H MAS NMR results.The OH anions prefer an Al-rich environment and occupy the Li-Al 2 sites and the fluorine anions the Li 2 Al sites.
The 1 H MAS NMR and 19 F MAS NMR spectra show a non-statistical distribution of the OH and F anion incorporated in the structure (Fig. 11).The obtained values of the area of the Li 2 Al signal concerning the three mica signals are below the expected value of the statistical distribution in the 1 H MAS NMR spectra (Fig. 11b).The OH anion prefers an Al-rich environment instead of a Li-rich environment as already indicated in the 29 Si MAS NMR measurements.With  pected value of the statistical distribution (Fig. 11a).The F anion prefers a Li-rich environment.As already observed for 1 H with increasing Al content, the values approach the statistical distribution.Similarly, the estimated values show larger deviations with increasing OH content.The assignments do also agree with the X-ray diffraction results shown in Table 3.The 27 Al MAS NMR lineshapes show a distribution of quadrupolar parameters in their signal components.These   dolites decrease systematically from trilithionite (x = 1.5) to polylithionite (x = 2.0) for both polytypes.
The overall composition of the synthesised micas can be characterised by 29 Si, 1 H and 19 F MAS NMR spectroscopy.The Si/Al ratio of the tetrahedral sheets and thus the content of [4] Al as well as the Li content could be calculated using the signal intensities of the 29 Si MAS NMR spectra.The values agree with the expected values.Deviations at certain OH/F ratios can be attributed to the crystallisation of impurity phases. 1 H and 19 F MAS NMR investigations indicate that there is a preference for incorporating fluorine near Li-rich environments and for OH groups near Al-rich environments.The distribution of OH and F in the micas is not statistical.The 27 Al MAS NMR spectra show two different signals belonging to [4] Al and [6] Al in the structure.The This open-access publication was funded by Ruhr-Universität Bochum.
Review statement.This paper was edited by Qun-Ke Xia and reviewed by Edward Grew and one anonymous referee.

Figure 1 .
Figure 1.Phase diagram of the dioctahedral muscovite, the trioctahedral trilithionite and the trioctahedral polylithionite and ternary diagram in terms of oxides showing the compositions of the samples used in the syntheses.

Figure 2 .
Figure 2. SEM images of three samples (a: polylithionite, b: trilithionite and c: muscovite).The crystallite sizes decrease with increasing disorder in the structure.

Figure 3 .
Figure 3. Diagram of phases as determined by X-ray diffraction for compositions along the trilithionite-muscovite (Li-muscovites) and the trilithionite-polylithionite join (lepidolites).Optimal compositions of the nominal oxide mixtures are plotted in brown dots, sufficient nominal compositions are plotted in red dots and inadequate compositions are displayed in orange dots.

Figure 5 .
Figure 5. Lattice metric of the polytype 1M of selected lepidolite and Li-muscovite samples adapted from TableS1.The error margins are less than the width of the data symbols.

Figure 7 .
Figure 7. 29 Si MAS NMR spectra with different x content (1.5 to 2.0) and constant OH content with y = 0.8.The polylithionite shows one defined signal for the Q 3 (0Al) environment.The second, belonging to the Q 3 (1Al) environment, and the third signal, belonging to the Q 3 (2Al) environment, appear and increase with decreasing Li content.The position of the signals is marked by the dashed lines.

Figure 8 .
Figure 8.The estimated Li content plotted against the nominal composition given in the synthesis (a) and the Si/Al ratio plotted against the nominal x content (b).The OH content is given by the blue and green colours.The black line shows the expected statistical value.
The 1 H MAS NMR spectra show several different signals with three signals according to the mica structure: Li 2 Al-O-H, LiAl 2 -O-H and Al 2 -O-H (Fig. 9).The polylithionite samples show only one signal at −1.0(3) ppm according to the Li 2 Al-O-H environment.This signal decreases with increasing Al content, and a second signal at 1.1(3) ppm appears, which can be assigned to the LiAl 2 -O-H or the Al 2 -O-H environment, respectively.This assignment is in agreement with Alba et al. (2000), who assigned the signal at 2.0 ppm to dioctahedral micas and the signal at 0.5 ppm to trioctahedral micas.There is no significant difference between the di-and trioctahedral signals.The positions of the signals from Al 2 -O-H and LiAl 2 -O-H environments are very close to each other and cannot be distinguished.The overlap results in broad signals.In addition, water signals are present, either from water inclusions (4.5 to -5.0 ppm) or crystal water from accompanying phases in the synthesis product (2.0 to 2.5 ppm).The position of the signals shifts from −1 ppm (polylithionite) to 0 ppm (muscovite) and 1 ppm (polylithionite) to 2 ppm (muscovite).The bond length and angle slightly change due to the variation in the chemical composition.This change in the coordination sphere leads to the shift of the signal position.The signal for the Li 2 Al-OH environment disappears below a lithium content of x = 0.6.The fluorine environment is very similar to the OH environment.Each fluorine anion is coordinating three octahedral cations which can be Li or Al.According to the structure, https://doi.org/10.5194/ejm-35-199-2023

Figure 10 .
Figure 10. 19F MAS NMR spectra of several samples with constant x = 1.5 content and increasing OH content (a) and with decreasing Li content (b).

Figure 11 .
Figure 11.Non-statistical distribution of the F anion (a) and the OH anion (b).The signal intensity of the Li 2 Al environment is plotted against the sum of signals originating from the octahedral sites (Li 2 Al, LiAl 2 , Al 2 ).The OH content is given by the blue and green colours.The black line shows the expected statistical value.
3.5 27 Al MAS NMR and 27 Al MQMAS NMR experiments The 27 Al MAS NMR experiments should show two different signals according to the mica structure: one for the tetrahedral Al and one for the octahedral aluminium.In the spectra of the polylithionite samples, one defined signal at 7(3) ppm appears, which can be assigned to the octahedral environment.A second signal at 73(3) ppm appears and increases with rising Al content (Fig. 12).This signal refers to the tetrahedrally coordinated aluminium.The other signals in the spectra represent the impurity phases sanidine (60(2) ppm) and eucryptite (62(2) ppm). 27Al MQMAS NMR experiments can be used to assign the signals correctly (Fig. 13).The two-dimensional experiment is able to separate signals with different quadrupolar interaction parameters in the second dimension.The upper left spectrum shows only signals from a lepidolite at δ(F2) = 73 ppm, δ(F1) = 95 ppm for tetrahedral aluminium and δ(F2) = 7 ppm, δ(F1) = 0 ppm for the octahedral site.The upper right spectrum shows an additional tetrahedral signal from sanidine at δ(F2) = 60 ppm, δ(F1) = 78 ppm (Zhou et al., 1997).In the lower left spectrum, the α-eucryptite shows two signals at δ(F2) = 60 ppm, δ(F1) = 95 ppm and δ(F2) = 85 ppm, δ(F1) = 82 ppm beneath the lepidolite and sanidine.The correct assignment was checked by a 27 Al MQMAS spectrum of pure α-eucryptite.

Figure 12 .
Figure 12. 27 Al MAS NMR spectra with variable Li content and an OH content of y = 0.4.The position of the tetrahedral signal is at 73(3) ppm and that of the octahedral at 7(3) ppm.
27 Al MQMAS NMR spectra finally enable us to clearly distinguish the 27 Al signals of the micas from additional signals of the secondary phases eucryptite and sanidine.The octahedral Al experiences the most anisotropic environment and thus the highest quadrupolar coupling constant in trilithionite (x = 1.5), containing both LiAl 2 and Al 2 Li environments with mixed OH/F occupation.Financial support.This research has been supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (grant nos.Fe 486/8-1, Fe 486/8-2, Ma 6641/2-1 and Ma 6641/2-2).

Table 1 .
The nominal chemical composition of the synthesis products with variable OH/F content. ).