Title: Soils 230 Soil Mineralogy
1Soils 230 Soil Mineralogy
2Overview
- Introduction
- Clay Mineralogy
- Landscape and Site
- Laboratory Methods
- Field Methods
- Rule .1941 a3
- Soil Taxonomy
- Example Tale of Two Soils
- Lab exercise
- Field Excercise
3Introduction
4Clay Mineralogy Why is it important?
- The minerals in the clay-sized fraction of the
soil affects the degree to which soils shrink
(when dry) and swell (when wetted). - As a clay soil swells the amount and size of pore
space decreases and affects the ability to move
water (effluent) through the soil.
5Hydraulic conductivity decline from wastewater
6Infiltration rate decline from wastewater
INFILTRATION RATE (cm/h)
LAUNDRY
TIME (h)
7Why does this happen?
- Change in cations in solution
- Disperse some clay
- Clogs pores
- Result in swelling of some clay
- Closes pores
8Expansive clay in thin section
- Bright colors due to the clay being oriented.
- Orientation due to stress (shrink-swell)
- Porosity limited
4 mm
9Nonexpansive clay in thin section
- Less oriented clay
- Voids outlines with clay skins (argillans)
4 mm
10Mixed clay in thin section
- Less oriented clay
- Thin argillans
- High iron content
4 mm
11Expansive clay low hydraulic conductivity
micropore network
(Borchardt, 1986)
12Introduction to Clay Minerals
- Alan Clapp, Dean Hesterberg, and David Lindbo
- Orange Co. Health Department
- Dept. of Soil Science, NC State
13Outline
- Building blocks
- Classification
- Properties
- Identification
- Formation
14Building Blocks of Clay
- Silica Tetrahedron-four sides, four oxygen
molecules and one silica (Si4) - Aluminum Octahedron-eight sides, six oxygen
molecules and one Al3 - These are bound together by shared oxygen
molecules into different layers
15Tetrahedron and Octahedron
16Clay Minerals
- Layer(s) of linked Si tetrahedra
- Layer(s) of Al octahedra
17Sheets of Tetrahedron and Octahedron
18Definitions
- Plane-plane of atoms, individual row in the
composition and structure of the clay mineral - Sheet-combination of planes
- Layer- combination of sheets i.e.. 11
19Clay Mineral Classification
- 11 Clay Minerals
- 21 Clay Minerals
- Mixed Mineralogy
20Clay Structure
2111 Clay Minerals
- Like an open face sandwich
- One silica tetrahedron (bread)
- One aluminum octahedron (filling)
- The most common 11 minerals is Kaolinite
2211 Clay Mineral
2311 Clay MineralsCEC 7 meq/100 gnon-expanding
2421 Clay Minerals
- Like a sandwich with two slices of bread
- Two silica tetrahedrons (bread)
- One aluminum octahedron (filling)
- The 21 clays can be broken into 2 groups
- Expansive
- Non expansive
2521 Clay Mineral
2621 Clay MineralsCEC 40 meq/100 gnon-expanding
27Non-expansive 21 Clays
- the sheets or layers are held together strongly
- neither water nor a change in the interlayer
cations causes them to swell - Illites are one group of non-expandable clays
28Expansive 21 Clays
- Bound together by very weak hydrogen bounds
(easily broken) - Will swell upon wetting
- Smectites (montmorillonite) are one group of
expandable clays
2921 Clay Minerals (expanding)CEC 100 200
meq/100 g (vermiculite) 70 120 meq/100 g
(smectite)
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31Properties
- Surface Area
- Cation Exchange Capacity
- Expansion
32Surface Area
- Smectite group minerals have higher CEC
- Smectite group minerals have a higher surface
area - Isomorphic substitutions plays a role in the
above and in the expansive nature of this group
33Selected Properties
34Why water causes the mineral to expand
- Water is dipolar- which simply means it can be
attracted to a net negative charge or a net
positive charge - Water carries many different ions in soil
solution - Water has a physical size
3511 Nonexpansive
Strong H-bonds
3621 Non-expanding
K interlayer
37Hydroxy-interlayered Vermiculite
Al-hydroxy- interlayer
3821 expandable
Exchangeable Cations
Weak H-bonds
3921 expandable
Hydration of Cations
40Soil mineralogy and consistence
- Clay mineralogy
- Water movement
- Management
- Consistence
- Field method to relate soil properties to clay
mineralogy
41Identification
- Layer spacing
- X-ray diffraction
- Expansive properties
42Layer Spacing
43Bragg's Law
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45X-Ray Diffraction
Quartz
Kaolinite
HIV
46X-Ray Diffraction
Quartz
Illite
Kaolinite
Smectite
47Formation
- Parent material
- Weathering
48Typical Weathering Sequence
- Poorly drained conditions (slow water movement)
- H4SiO40 dissolves from primary minerals
- Accumulates is soil
- Favors 21 clay formation (smectite)
- Well drained conditions (high rainfall)
- H4SiO40 leaches through profile
- Bases leach through profile (more acid)
- Favors 21 illite/vermiculite to 11 kaolinite
to gibbsite
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50Jackson-Sherman Weathering Stages
51Selected Mineral Transformations
- Ca2
H4SiO40
Ca2
- K
52Weathering Pathways
Noncrystaline hydrous oxides of Si, Al, Fe and Ti
Olivine Pyroxene Amphibole
Goethite Hematite Gibbsite
Chlorite
Na
H
OH
Biotite
Trioctahedral Vermiculite
Na
Smectite
Na
Dioctahedral Illite
Muscovite
K
- Si
Si
Gibbsite
Noncrystaline aliminosilicates
Feldspar
Kaolinite Halloysite
- Si
- Si
Al
Quartz
Silicic Acid
Chalcedony Opal
53Parent Material
- The 11 minerals are usually weathered from
acidic or felsic parent materials - The expanding 21 minerals are usually weathered
from basic or mafic parent material - Parent material plays the biggest part of whether
the soil will be expansive
54Clay Minerals
- Layered silicates
- Properties relate to surface area and charge
- Weathering is predictable
- Parent material of primary importance
- Drainage also may relate to clay mineralogy