Oxidation state of gold and arsenic in gold-bearing arsenian pyrite

351Citations
Citations of this article
105Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

XANES measurements on gold-bearing arsenian pyrite from the Twin Creeks Carlin-type gold deposits show that gold is present as both Au0 and Au(I+) and arsenic is present at As(I-) · Au0 is attributed to sub-micrometer size inclusions of free gold, whereas Au(I+) is attributed to gold in the lattice of the arsenian pyrite. STEM observations suggest that As(I-) is probably concentrated in angstrom-scale, randomly distributed layers with a marcasite or arsenopyrite structure. Ionic gold (Au(I+)) could be concentrated in these layers as well, and is present in both twofold- and fourfold-coordinated forms, with fourfold-coordinated Au(I+) more abundant. Twofold-coordinated Au(I+) is similar to gold in Au2S in which it is linearly coordinated to two sulfur atoms. The nature of fourfold-coordinated Au(I+) is not well understood, although it might be present as an Au-As-S compound where gold is bonded in fourfold coordination to sulfur and arsenic atoms, or in vacancy positions on a cation site in the arsenian pyrite. Au(I+) was probably incorporated into arsenian pyrite by adsorption onto pyrite surfaces during crystal growth. The most likely compound in the case of twofold-coordinated Au(I+) was probably a tri-atomic surface complex such as S(pyrite)-Au(I+)-S(bi-sulfide)H or Au(I+)-S-Au(I+). The correlation between gold and arsenic might be related to the role of arsenic in enhancing the adsorption of gold complexes of this type on pyrite surfaces, possibly through semiconductor effects.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Simon, G., Huang, H., Penner-Hahn, J. E., Kesler, S. E., & Kao, L. S. (1999). Oxidation state of gold and arsenic in gold-bearing arsenian pyrite. American Mineralogist, 84(7–8), 1071–1079. https://doi.org/10.2138/am-1999-7-809

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free