During project STARDUST, a systematic decade-long search for micrometeorites in Norway, over 5500 specimens were recovered. Among them, a micrometeorite labelled NMM/L2, collected from a rooftop in Oslo, Norway, revealed the presence of a previously unknown Al–Cu intermetallic alloy with Al4Cu9 stoichiometry. This new phase has been approved by the IMA Commission on New Minerals, Nomenclature and Classification as a new mineral species with the name jonlarsenite (IMA 2024-078a). The microspherule ( 200 μm in diameter) exhibits a scoriaceous morphology and mineralogical features consistent with micrometeorites, including the presence of olivine, oxides, Fe–Ni metal beads, and Ca-rich silicate glass. Jonlarsenite occurs as about 2 μm grains intimately intergrown with Cu-bearing aluminum and is associated with magnesian olivine, spinel, taenite, and silicate glass. Its extraterrestrial origin is revealed by oxygen isotope compositions and chondritic bulk chemistry, similar to previously reported Al- and Cu-bearing meteoritic materials. Characterisation by electron probe microanalysis (EPMA), STEM energy-dispersive X-ray spectrometry (STEM-EDS), and HR-TEM indicated the mineral to be cubic, space group P-43m, with a 8:70Å and a calculated density of 6.979 g cm-3. The ideal chemical formula is Al4Cu9, with minor Fe substituting for both Al and Cu. Selected area electron diffraction (SAED) and high-angle annular dark-field scanning TEM (HAADF-STEM) imaging showed a perfect match with the known ordered structure of synthetic -Al4Cu9. Due to micrometre-scale grain size, physical properties could not be measured. Jonlarsenite expands the suite of known natural intermetallic Al–Cu(–Fe) phases and highlights the significance of micrometeorites as repositories of exotic materials formed under extreme astrophysical conditions.
Jonlarsenite, Al4Cu9, a new intermetallic phase in the Al–Cu system discovered in a micrometeorite from Oslo, Norway / Luca Bindi, Jan Kihle, Guangming Cheng, Jinping Hu, Nan Yao, Chi Ma, Yunbin Guan, Paul Asimow, Paul Steinhardt. - In: EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF MINERALOGY. - ISSN 0935-1221. - STAMPA. - 37:(2025), pp. 783-791. [10.5194/ejm-37-783-2025]
Jonlarsenite, Al4Cu9, a new intermetallic phase in the Al–Cu system discovered in a micrometeorite from Oslo, Norway
Luca Bindi
;Paul Steinhardt
2025
Abstract
During project STARDUST, a systematic decade-long search for micrometeorites in Norway, over 5500 specimens were recovered. Among them, a micrometeorite labelled NMM/L2, collected from a rooftop in Oslo, Norway, revealed the presence of a previously unknown Al–Cu intermetallic alloy with Al4Cu9 stoichiometry. This new phase has been approved by the IMA Commission on New Minerals, Nomenclature and Classification as a new mineral species with the name jonlarsenite (IMA 2024-078a). The microspherule ( 200 μm in diameter) exhibits a scoriaceous morphology and mineralogical features consistent with micrometeorites, including the presence of olivine, oxides, Fe–Ni metal beads, and Ca-rich silicate glass. Jonlarsenite occurs as about 2 μm grains intimately intergrown with Cu-bearing aluminum and is associated with magnesian olivine, spinel, taenite, and silicate glass. Its extraterrestrial origin is revealed by oxygen isotope compositions and chondritic bulk chemistry, similar to previously reported Al- and Cu-bearing meteoritic materials. Characterisation by electron probe microanalysis (EPMA), STEM energy-dispersive X-ray spectrometry (STEM-EDS), and HR-TEM indicated the mineral to be cubic, space group P-43m, with a 8:70Å and a calculated density of 6.979 g cm-3. The ideal chemical formula is Al4Cu9, with minor Fe substituting for both Al and Cu. Selected area electron diffraction (SAED) and high-angle annular dark-field scanning TEM (HAADF-STEM) imaging showed a perfect match with the known ordered structure of synthetic -Al4Cu9. Due to micrometre-scale grain size, physical properties could not be measured. Jonlarsenite expands the suite of known natural intermetallic Al–Cu(–Fe) phases and highlights the significance of micrometeorites as repositories of exotic materials formed under extreme astrophysical conditions.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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