Mineralogical studies on iron-containing mineral medicines, Haematitum and Limonitum.
10.19540/j.cnki.cjcmm.202411214.102
- Author:
Min LU
1
;
Xiao-Fei WANG
1
;
Cheng-Cheng WANG
1
;
Jing-Xu CHEN
1
;
Hang-Jie ZHU
1
;
Juan LI
1
;
Yan CAO
1
Author Information
1. School of Pharmacy, Hubei University of Chinese Medicine Wuhan 430065, China Hubei Shizhen Laboratory Wuhan 430061, China.
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords:
Haematitum;
Limonitum;
advanced mineral identification and characterization system(AMICS);
iron-containing mineral medicine;
mineralogy
- MeSH:
Iron/analysis*;
Minerals/chemistry*;
Drugs, Chinese Herbal/chemistry*;
X-Ray Diffraction;
Microscopy, Electron, Scanning;
Photoelectron Spectroscopy
- From:
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica
2025;50(5):1179-1186
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Haematitum and Limonitum are two iron-containing mineral medicines included in the 2020 edition of the Chinese Pharmacopoeia. They have similar main components and major differences in their property, flavor, channel tropism, and clinical uses. In this study, we investigated the surface properties, mineral composition, mineral dissociation, elemental composition, and iron state of Haematitum and Limonitum to explore their mineralogical differences. Scanning electron microscopy(SEM), specific surface and porosity analyzer, X-ray diffractometer(XRD), X-ray photoelectron spectrometer(XPS), and advanced mineral identification and characterization system(AMICS) were used to analyze the mineralogy of Haematitum and Limonitum. The results showed that Haematitum had an angular surface with granular attachments and a specific surface area of 17.04 m~2·g~(-1). In comparison, Limonitum had a smooth and flat surface with a bundled acicular crystal structure and a specific surface area of 46.29 m~2·g~(-1). Haematitum consists of 31 detectable minerals containing 18 elements, with the major element, iron(44.5% Fe~(2+) and 55.5% Fe~(3+)) distributed in 17 minerals, including hematite, iron oxide, knebelite, siderite, and magnesioferrite. Limonitum consists of 32 detectable minerals containing 17 elements, with the major element, iron(14.5% Fe~(2+) and 85.5% Fe~(3+)) distributed in 19 minerals, including limonite, iron oxide, chlorite, and knebelite. In summary, the elemental composition of Haematitum and Limonitum does not differ greatly, but there are large differences in the mineral composition and iron state. The large specific surface area and strong adsorption capacity of Limonitum may be one of the mechanisms of its anti-diarrheal action. The Fe_2O_3 and illite contained in Haematitum and Limonitum may be the key substances for their hemostasis effects. The mineralogical differences are expected to provide a reference for explaining the scientific connotation of mineral medicine and laying a material foundation for studying its mechanism of action.