Skip to Main Content
Skip Nav Destination
GEOREF RECORD

Hydrothermal reactivity of mixed-layer kaolinite/smectite; experimental transformation of high-charge to low-charge smectite

D. Proust, Jacques Lechelle, Alain Lajudie and A. Meunier
Hydrothermal reactivity of mixed-layer kaolinite/smectite; experimental transformation of high-charge to low-charge smectite
Clays and Clay Minerals (August 1990) 38 (4): 415-425

Abstract

A mixed-layer kaolinite/smectite (K/S) containing trace amounts of quartz, discrete kaolinite, goethite-hematite, and calcite was hydrothermally reacted with deionized water at 150 degrees , 200 degrees , and 250 degrees C for 1 to 12 months. The starting K/S contained 50% smectite consisting of 15% low-charge and 35% high-charge layers. The X-ray powder diffraction and chemical analyses of the reacted products indicated a progressive reaction from high-charge to low-charge smectite as a function of time and temperature. The reaction reached completion after 4 months at 250 degrees C, at which point high-charge smectite layers entirely reacted to low-charge smectite layers, the latter maintaining a constant proportion of about 90% for longer run durations. For long reaction times, discrete kaolinite totally reacted, whereas quartz showed only partial dissolution and iron oxides remained stable. Thus, the reaction of high-charge to low-charge smectite layers may be expressed as: high-charge smectite + kaolinite (both interstratified and discrete component) + quartz --> low-charge smectite.


ISSN: 0009-8604
Coden: CLCMAB
Serial Title: Clays and Clay Minerals
Serial Volume: 38
Serial Issue: 4
Title: Hydrothermal reactivity of mixed-layer kaolinite/smectite; experimental transformation of high-charge to low-charge smectite
Affiliation: Univ. Poitiers, Lab. Petrol. Altererations Hydrotherm., Poitiers, France
Pages: 415-425
Published: 199008
Text Language: English
Publisher: Clay Minerals Society, Clarkson, NY, United States
References: 30
Accession Number: 1990-053154
Categories: Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sedimentsSedimentary petrology
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus. incl. 6 tables
Secondary Affiliation: Commis. Energ. At., FRA, France
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2017, American Geosciences Institute. Abstract, Copyright, Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland
Update Code: 1990
Close Modal

or Create an Account

Close Modal
Close Modal