Abstract:
Silicon and aluminum are the most abundant of the
elements constituting the earth. Clay-the powder obtained
from the disintegration of rocks,is,chemically,ferro-aluminosilicate,
of varying composition,with some other elements like
sodium,potassium,calcium,magnesium etc.thrown in.Physically
it consists of particles of diameters ranging from 1.0 mm to
0.00001 mm in varying proportions.
The definition of soil(l)as a mass of inorganic
material that holds inorganic and organic colloids,dead and
living plant and animal material,water and gases in variable
but balanced proportions has lost much of its original
significance. Soil is much more complex than what this definit
ion conveys. Broadly speaking^it consists of four components,
namely,mineral materials,organic matter,water and air.The
most important and yet highly intriguing constituent,to which
the soil complexity may be attributed,is its mineral matter,
consisting of particles of varying size;those in the finer
state of subdivision(<C0.002 mm) form the clay fraction of
the soil and the coarse ones consist of mainly rock debris(2).
Clay minerals study and Its importance:
Clay minerals have been studied for a great many years,
but within the last thirty years,great strides have been made
not only by soil chemists,but by investigators from very many
different disciplines.This has been possible mainly due to
increasing importance of clay mineralogy in industry and
technology(3),substantiated with the results in the field of
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mineralogy and emergence of new instrumental techniques.
In the ceramic industry,only some particular clays
can be used to manufacture these ceramic products. Studies
of the changes taking place when clay minerals are heated
to elevated temperatures have greatly enhanced our knowledge
in this field, (4,5).
In the oil industry,certain types of bentonite clays
are essential,for the preparation of the muds,required for
the drilling of oil wells,while a different type of bentonite,
forms the basis of many of the catalysts,used in the refining
of petroleum products,(6,7).
Certain types of kaolinites are used as fillers and
coating materials in the paper industry. Research into
structure and properties of kaolinite has resulted in
improvements of such paper properties as acceptance to ink,
rate of drying etc., (8,9).
On the basis of the empirical laboratory data the
engineer has tried to ascertain conditions for soil
stabilization, (10).
Similarly for the geologist and the agricultural
research workers,the treatment of the subject depends to a
very large extent on the proper knowledge,of the clay mineral
composition, of the soil and rock debris, (2,11,12).
Origin of clav minerals:
All the various clay minerals,with the possible
exception of attapulgite-palygorskite and vermiculite,have
been authentically reported in hydrothermal bodies. In many
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hydrothermal clay bodies a zonal arrangement of clay minerals
has been observed. Often there is an inner halo of sericite
(white mica alteration product),an intermediate zone of
kaolinite,and an outer zone of montmorillonite and chlorite;
chlorite being most abundant on the outermost fringe, (2).
On the basis of their classic study at Montana,Sales
and Myer(l3) concluded that alteration is essentially
contemporaneous with ore deposition. Lovering (14) and Kerr
(15) have described wall rock alteration,at numerous deposits,
which seems to have developed in stages.
Chloritic mica and vermiculite were reported as minor
constituents,in a clay mineral analysis, of series of sediments
from Eastern France and Germany by Millot(l6). The illitic
and chloritic clay minerals found in slates have a higher
crystallinity and are composed of layer units more regularly
oriented. Grim et al(l7) identified chloritic clay mineral,
in some samples from the Gulf of Qalifornia,and the Pacific
Ocean off the California coast,and also concluded from their
data that kaolinite is very slowly being lost in these marine
sediments,probably by alteration to illite or chloritic mica.
It seems certain that chloritic mica and illite also tend
to form during marine diagenesis from other minerals.
Laboratory synthesis of clay minerals:
a. Synthesis from mixtures of oxides and hydroxides at
elevated temperatures and pressures:- Noll(18) working with
silica and alumina gels,between 250° - 500°C, claimed the
formation of kaolinite with some other different phases. On
the other hand,Roy(19) has shown that halloysite may be the
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resulting phase in the system Al203~Si02~H2° rathQr than
kaolinite.
b. Synthesis from mixtures of crystalline minerals and
chemical reagents at elevated temperatures and pressures:-
According to Gruner(20) kaolinite,pyrophillite,muscovite
and boehmite are the phases formed,when micrqline and
albite are subjected to high temperatures and""pressures,in
presence of Al(0H>3,Si02 and KC1 under acid conditions .Badger
and Ally (2l) produced kaolinite,on heating potash feldspar
for 24 hrs., at 225°C under a pressure of 1800 P.s.i., in
presence of 5% hydrofluoric acid.
c. Synthesis from mixtures of oxides and hydroxides at
ordinary temperature and pressure:-Sedletsky(22)mixed sodium
silicate and sodium aluminate,leached it with 1 N MgCl ,
washed the product and after four years of ageing,identified
a product similar to montmorillonite. Caillere and Renin
(23) reported the synthesis of clay minerals,by electrolysis
of solution of silica,or alumina-silica mixture. The product
depended on the nature of the anode used. Aluminum anode
gives kaolinite while with a magnesium anode antigorite is
formed.
d. Transformations of clay minerals at ordinary temperature
and pressure:- Many investigators including Caillere and
Henin (24),Volk(25),Aleshin(26) and Barshad(27) have shown
that a material substantially like illite is produced,
from montmorillonite when all its exchange positions are
occupied by potassium ions, and the material is dried at
110°C. Formation of kaolinite from montmorillonite,by its
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treatment with 2C# CaCl2,0.5# NagAlOg and 10# A1(NG^)3 for
3-4 days and then with HC1 or NR"40H has been reported by
Caillere and Henin(28). The latter authors(29) have further
shown that the treatment of montmorillonite,under certain
++
conditions,with a solution containing Mg ions so that all
the exchange positions are occupied by the magnesium ions,
produces a product having the characteristics of chlorite.
Synthesis of chlorite:
Most of the work cited in the literature on chlorites
has been done by Caillere and Henin. The widespread
occurrence of different varieties of chlorites,in soils and
sedimentary rocks,has been explained frequently as the
result of precipitation of hydroxides of magnesium,iron,or
aluminum between the unit sheets of expanding clay minerals.
This explanation has been supported by reports of the
laboratory preparation of chlorite like materials as a
result of the precipitation of hydroxides in montmorillonite
suspensions. Tne original description of this process was
given by Caillere and Henin (loc.cit.). Subsequent papers
by Caillere and Henin(30),Longuet Escard(31) and Youell
(32) have indicated,that the hydroxides or hydrous oxides,
of magnesium, aluminum,nickel,cobalt,zinc and ferrous iron,
can form montmorillonite-hydroxide complexes.
A wide variation exists under which these chlorite
like structures have been prepared. Caillere and Henin
(loc.cit.) used fairly concentrated suspension-solution
mixtures, containing 6% clay and 1 N to 4 N concentration
of MgClg. The precipitation of magnesium hydroxide was
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carried out by dropwise addition of ammonium hydroxide
solution accompanied by vigorous shaking. Longuet Escard
(loc.cit.), on the other hand,reported the formation of
aluminum hydroxide and nickel hydroxide complexes with
montmorillonite,in systems containing 0.5 - 1.0 jS clay
and less than 0.1 N concentration of metal nitrates.Youell
(loc.cit),reported,without details,a successful electrolytic
method of precipitating magnesium and zinc hydroxides within
the interlayer space of montmorillonite.
Slaughter and Milne(33) have prepared chlorite»like
complexes of montmorillonite with magnesium hydroxide and
other hydroxides,under a variety of physical and chemical
conditions. Requirements for the preparation of these
complexes have been simplified considerably by the use of
rapid mixing techniques. A complex may be formed either by
precipitating the hydroxide in a clay suspension,or by
preparing the precipitate separately and mixing it with the
clay suspension immediately. These studies had been under
taken to assess the possible geological significance of this
method of formation of chlorite.
Structure of clay minerals:
The older concepts that the clay minerals are
particles more or less spherical,have now been replaced by
newer one,Shaw(34). It is now well established that the
particles are laminated,i.e., made up of layers of plates
or flakes, the individual size and shape depending upon
their mineralogical organisation and the conditions in which
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they have developed e.g.hexagonal blades,rods or fluffy.
For long,clays were considered to be composed of
amorphous matter and all attempts to interpret their
properties had to be based on the findings of strictly
chemical methods of investigation. Extensive studies of
X-Ray diffraction patterns have revealed that even the finest
fraction of clays are crystalline in nature and composed of
comparatively few and simple building units,(35,36). The
difference in the properties of various clays is now believed
to depend on the spatial arrangement of these units in the
crystal lattice.
The structure of the common clay minerals have been
determined in considerable details,by numerous investigators,
based on the generalisations of Pauling(37). Two structural
units are involved in the atomic lattice of most of the clay
minerals. The first consists of a silicon tetrahedron,in
which a silicon atom is equidistant from four oxygens or
hydroxyIs,the silicon being in the centre. The second unit
consists of two sheets of closely packed oxygens or hydroxyls
in octahedral co-ordination,so that they are equidistant
from six oxygens or six hydroxyls. Combination of these
structural «nits(held by chemical forces),with modifications,
finally gives rise to the structure of clay minerals,that
are found in the colloid clay fractions of soils,
a. Structure of kaolinite:- It is a hydrous aluminum silicate
of approximate composition Al203 2Si02 2H20. Its structure was
first suggested by Pauling(loc.cit.) and worked out in
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details by Gruner(38) and Brindley et al (39). In kaolinite,
a single silica tetrahedral sheet is topped with a slightly
distorted gibbsite sheet,both being formed by condensation
and splitting off of water between adjoining hydroxy! group
in vertex position. All the tips of the silica tetrahedrons
point in the same direction and towards the centre of the
unit made of silica and alumina sheets. The mineral can thus
be described as,having a 1:1,non expanding lattice.Structural
formula may be expressed as (0H)g Al4Si40l0 and the size
of the unit cell is 7.2 A. The space lattice is such that
there is little substitution of ions in its structure and
there are no unsatisfied valencies on the cleavage surface.
Cation exchange capacity (c.e.c.) is insignificant,
b. Structure of montmorillonite:- The mineral was first
studied by Le Chatelier(40) and has been assigned the
formula (OH) Al4Sig020 x RgO. Ross and Hendricks(41)
established the identity of montmorillonite as a definite
clay mineral species. Structurally, the mineral consists
of three layers,a gibbsite sheet enclosed between two silica
sheets with their vertices pointing towards each other and
towards the centre of the unit. X-Ray studies have shown
stacking of siLica-alumina-silica units in the c-directlon,
layers being continuous in a and b directions