The carbonate chlorides are double salts containing both carbonate and chlorideanions. Quite a few minerals are known. Several artificial compounds have been made. Some complexes have both carbonate and chloride ligands. They are part of the family of halocarbonates. In turn these halocarbonates are a part of mixed anion materials.
The carbonate chlorides do not have a bond from chlorine to carbon, however "chlorocarbonate" has also been used to refer to the chloroformates which contain the group ClC(O)O-.
Formation
Natural
Scapolite is produced in nature by metasomatism, where hot high pressure water solutions of carbon dioxide and sodium chloride modify plagioclase.[1]
The "lanthaballs" are lanthanoid atom clusters held together by carbonate and other ligands. They can form chlorides. Examples are [La13(ccnm)6(CO3)14(H2O)6(phen)18] Cl3(CO3)·25H2O where ccnm is carbamoylcyanonitrosomethanide and phen is 1,10-phenanthroline. Praseodymium (Pr) or cerium (Ce) can substitute for lanthanum (La).[28] Other lanthanide cluster compounds include :(H3O)6[Dy76O10(OH)138(OAc)20(L)44(H2O)34]•2CO3•4
Cl2•L•2OAc (nicknamed Dy76) and (H3O)6[Dy48O6(OH)84(OAc)4(L)15(hmp)18(H2O)20]•CO3•14Cl•2H2O (termed Dy48-T) with OAc=acetate, and L=3-furancarboxylate and Hhmp=2,2-bis(hydroxymethyl)propionic acid.[29]
Platinum can form complexes with carbonate and chloride ligands, in addition to an amino acid. Examples include the platinum compound [Pt(gluH)Cl(CO3)]2.2H2O gluH=glutamic acid, and Na[Pt(gln)Cl2(CO3)].H2O gln=glutamine.[30]Rhodium complexes include Rh2(bipy)2(CO3)2Cl (bipy=bipyridine)[31]
References
^Harlov, D. E.; Budzyn, B. (December 2008). "The stability of Cl-CO3-scapolite relative to plagioclase + CaCO3 + CaSO4 in the presence of NaCl brines as a function of P-T-XNaCl". AGUFM. 2008: V31C–2156–2156. Bibcode:2008AGUFM.V31C2156H.
^Pekov, Igor V.; Zubkova, Natalia V.; Yapaskurt, Vasiliy O.; Lykova, Inna S.; Chukanov, Nikita V.; Belakovskiy, Dmitry I.; Britvin, Sergey N.; Turchkova, Anna G.; Pushcharovsky, Dmitry Y. (2019-02-21). "Alexkhomyakovite, K6(Ca2Na)(CO3)5Cl∙6H2O, a new mineral from the Khibiny alkaline complex, Kola peninsula, Russia". European Journal of Mineralogy. 31 (1): 135–143. Bibcode:2019EJMin..31..135P. doi:10.1127/ejm/2018/0030-2798. ISSN0935-1221. S2CID134451790.
^Chukanov, Nikita V.; Zubkova, Natalia V.; Pekov, Igor V.; Olysych, Lyudmila V.; Bonaccorsi, Elena; Pushcharovsky, Dmitry YU. (2010-03-18). "Balliranoite, (Na,K)6Ca2(Si6Al6O24)Cl2(CO3), a new cancrinite-group mineral from Monte Somma Vesuvio volcanic complex, Italy". European Journal of Mineralogy. 22 (1): 113–119. Bibcode:2010EJMin..22..113C. doi:10.1127/0935-1221/2010/0022-1983. ISSN0935-1221.
^Kashayev, A. A.; Feoktistov, G. D.; Petrova, S. V. (July 1983). "Chlormagaluminite (Mg, Fe 2+ ) 4 Al 2 (OH) 12 (Cl, 1/2 CO 3 ) 2 ·2H 2 O-a new mineral of the manasseite-sjogrenite group". International Geology Review. 25 (7): 848–853. Bibcode:1983IGRv...25..848K. doi:10.1080/00206818309466774. ISSN0020-6814.
^ abFrost, Ray L.; Palmer, Sara J. (2011-11-15). "Raman spectrum of decrespignyite [(Y,REE)4Cu(CO3)4Cl(OH)5·2H2O] and its relation with those of other halogenated carbonates including bastnasite, hydroxybastnasite, parisite and northupite". Journal of Raman Spectroscopy. 42 (11): 2042–2048. Bibcode:2011JRSp...42.2042F. doi:10.1002/jrs.2959.
^Antao, S. M.; Hassan, I. (2011-04-01). "COMPLETE Al-Si ORDER IN SCAPOLITE Me37.5, IDEALLY Ca3Na5[Al8Si16O48]Cl(CO3), AND IMPLICATIONS FOR ANTIPHASE DOMAIN BOUNDARIES (APBs)". The Canadian Mineralogist. 49 (2): 581–586. Bibcode:2011CaMin..49..581A. doi:10.3749/canmin.49.2.581. ISSN0008-4476.
^Sokolova, Elena; Hawthorne, Frank C. (2003). "The Crystal Structure Of An Anthropogenic Cu–k–na–hydro-Hydroxyl–carbonate–chloride From Johanngeorgenstadt, Saxony, Germany". The Canadian Mineralogist. 41 (4): 929–936. Bibcode:2003CaMin..41..929S. doi:10.2113/gscanmin.41.4.929.
^Il'Inets, A. M.; Nevskii, N. N.; Ilyukhin, V. V.; Belov, N. V. (March 1983). "A new type of infinite silicate radical [Si10O25] in the synthetic compound LiBa9[Si10O25]CI7(CO3)". SPHD. 28: 213. Bibcode:1983SPhD...28..213I.
^Leyva-Bailen, Patricia; Vaqueiro, Paz; Powell, Anthony V. (September 2009). "Ionothermal synthesis of the mixed-anion material, Ba3Cl4CO3". Journal of Solid State Chemistry. 182 (9): 2333–2337. Bibcode:2009JSSCh.182.2333L. doi:10.1016/j.jssc.2009.06.019.
^Chesman, Anthony S. R.; Turner, David R.; Langley, Stuart K.; Moubaraki, Boujemaa; Murray, Keith S.; Deacon, Glen B.; Batten, Stuart R. (2015-02-02). "Synthesis and Structure of New Lanthanoid Carbonate "Lanthaballs"". Inorganic Chemistry. 54 (3): 792–800. doi:10.1021/ic5016115. ISSN0020-1669. PMID25349948.
^Li, Xiao-Yu; Su, Hai-Feng; Li, Quan-Wen; Feng, Rui; Bai, Hui-Yun; Chen, Hua-Yu; Xu, Jian; Bu, Xian-He (22 July 2019). "A Giant Dy76 Cluster: A Fused Bi-Nanopillar Structural Model for Lanthanide Clusters". Angewandte Chemie International Edition. 58 (30): 10184–10188. doi:10.1002/anie.201903817. PMID31090998. S2CID155089115.