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Journal ArticleDOI

Dehydration of Synthetic Hydrated Kaolinites: A Model for the Dehydration of Halloysite(10Å)

P. M. Costanzo
- 01 Oct 1985 - 
- Vol. 33, Iss: 5, pp 415-423
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TLDR
In this paper, a model for the dehydration of halloysite(10,/t) was proposed based on the 10-Zk and 8.6-k hydrates.
Abstract
Several hydrates can be synthesized from well-crystallized kaolinites; of importance to the present work are a 10-Zk hydrate (called the QS-10 hydrate), an 8.6-~k hydrate, and two kinds of partially dehydrated mixed-layer hydrates. One kind is a series of unstable materials with d(001) varying contin- uously between 10 and 8.6/~, and the other kind is stable with d(001) approximately centered at 7.9 ~t. The 10- and 7.9-7t phases have been observed in haUoysites by many workers using X-ray powder diffraction, and the 8.6-)i phase has been seen by others in selected area electron diffraction photographs. Infrared spectra reveal additional similarities between the synthetic hydrates and both halloysite(1071) and partially dehydrated halloysites. Because of these similarities, the synthetic hydrates can be used to develop a model for the dehydration of halloysite(10,/t). Previous work on the 10- and 8.6-/~1 hydrates identified two structural environments for the interlayer water. In one, the water is keyed into the ditrigonal holes of the silicate layer (hole water), and in the other, the water is more mobile (associated water). Both types are found in the QS-10 hydrate and halloysite(10,3i), whereas only hole water occurs in the 8.6-,/t hydrate. In the QS-10 hydrate, stronger hydrogen bonding between hole water and the clay makes the hole water more stable than the associated water. This difference in stability is responsible for a two-step dehydration process. The first step is the loss of associated water which results in a material with d(001) = 8.6 ~. This stable hydrate must be heated to temperatures near 200"C to drive off the remaining hole water. The less perfect structure of halloysite and its common curvilinear morphology reduce the difference in stability between hole and associated water molecules, so that when halloysite(10/~t) dehydrates, loss of hole water and associated water overlaps, and the d-spacing goes directly to 7.2-7.9 ~t.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Halloysite clay minerals — a review

TL;DR: Halloysite clay minerals are ubiquitous in soils and weathered rocks where they occur in a variety of particle shapes and hydration states as discussed by the authors and diversity also characterizes their chemical composition, cation exchange capacity and potassium selectivity.
Book ChapterDOI

Structure and Mineralogy of Clay Minerals

TL;DR: In this paper, the crystal chemical and structural details related to phyllosilicates and describes the fundamental features leading to their different behaviour in different natural or technical processes, as also detailed in other chapters of this book.
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Chapter 2 Structures and Mineralogy of Clay Minerals

TL;DR: In this paper, the structure and mineralogy of clay minerals are described and the 1:1 and 2:1 layer unit cells are characterized by the repetition of one tetrahedral and one octahedral sheet.
Journal ArticleDOI

Why does halloysite roll?--a new model

TL;DR: In this paper, a model is presented to explain why tubular halloysite rolls in preference to tetrahedral rotation to correct misfit of the octahedral and tetralayer sheets.
Journal ArticleDOI

The thermal behavior of kaolinite intercalation complexes-A review

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors summarized the most recent achievements in the thermal behavior study of kaolinite intercalation complexes obtained with the most common reagents including potassium acetate, formamide, dimethyl sulfoxide, hydrazine and urea.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Observation of the hydrated form of tubular halloysite by an electron microscope equipped with an environmental cell

TL;DR: In this paper, the selected area electron diffraction (SAED) analysis of the halloysite (10 A) and its morphological changes by dehydration was performed by a conventional electron microscope equipped with an environmental cell.
Journal ArticleDOI

Static and dynamic structure of water in hydrated kaolinites. i. the static structure

TL;DR: The 8.4-A and 8.6-A hydrates have only hole water, whereas the two synthetic 10-A hyddrates and halloysite(lOA) contain both hole and associated water as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Diffraction intensities from bent crystals

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors derived expressions for the diffraction intensities given by coherently diffracting regions of a crystal in which the lattice is elastically bent, on the assumption that the amount of bending within such a region is small.
Journal ArticleDOI

Atom positions in highly ordered kaolinite

TL;DR: The crystal structure of kaolinite (Pl, a = 5.153(1), b = 8.941 (1), c = 7.822(3)°, specimens from Keokuk geodes) has been refined in detail as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Relationship Between the Hydrated and Dehydrated States of an Halloysite

TL;DR: In this paper, a study of the mineralogical changes taking place during the loss of interlayer water in an halloysite has been carried out in order to clarify the relationship between the most hydrated and least hydrated states.
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