Title: Soil Colloids
1Soil Colloids
4 TYPES Crystalline Silicates 11, 21
(expanding and non-expanding), 211 Non-Crystalli
ne Silicates Allophane and Immogolite (products
of volcanic ash) Fe and Al Oxides / Hydroxides /
Oxyhydroxides Geothite, Gibbsite, Hematite,
Ferryhydrite, Maghemite Organic Matter
(humus) High and Low Molecular Weight Acids
(Fulvic, Fluvic, Hemic)
2Crystalline Silicate Claysclassified by the
ratio of the respective sheets within a layerand
by the relative charge of an individual layer
11 Kaolinite, halloysite, nacrite,
dickite 21 Smectite montmorillonite,
biedellite, nontronite Vermiculite (di- or tri-
octahedral) Fine-Grained Micas -
Illite 211 Chlorite
3Primary Silicate Minerals
Most abundant mineral in Earths Crust Silicon
and Oxygen are 2 most abundant elements Si and O
in combination with other elements Silicate Ion
Basic Building Block SiO4-4 results in a
tetrahedron
4Silica Tetrahedron
http//socrates.berkeley.edu/eps2/wisc/Lect4.html
5Primary Silicate Minerals Tecto-silicates Phyllo-
silicates Ino-silicates (single
chain) Ino-silicates (double chain) Cyclo-silicat
es Neso-silicates Soro-silicates
6Primary Silicate Minerals
Are the building blocks of igneous rocks Common
in Sand and Silt fractions Weather into
Secondary Clay Minerals
7Mica (SEM)
Mica weathers into clay Serge Jolicoeur Universit
e de Moncton
8Secondary Silicate Minerals
Dominate The Clay Fraction of Soils Very High
Specific Surface Areas Electrostatically Charged
Due to Isomorphous Substitution pH Dependant
Charge Variable Charge
9Properties of Clays
10Table of Secondary Clay Minerals
11Structures of Secondary Silicate Minerals
From Small (atoms) to Large (soils, rocks) Why
Tetrahedron or Octahedron? Size of
Ion Composition and Combinations of
layers/sheets Chemical and Physical Properties
of Clay minerals
12Structures of Secondary Minerals
Table 8.2Â Â Ionic Radii and Location of Elements
Found in Silicate Clays Brady and Weil
13Tetrahedron and Octahedron
SiO4-4
AlO6-9
14Tetrahedral Sheet
http//www.tulane.edu/sanelson/eens211/weathering
clayminerals.htm
15Octahedral Sheet
http//www.tulane.edu/sanelson/eens211/weathering
clayminerals.htm
16Octahedral Sheet
Tri-octahedral vs Di-octahedral Brucite
Gibbsite
http//www.gly.uga.edu/schroeder/geol6550/CM06.htm
l
171 1 Phyllosilicates
18Kaolinite
Al2Si2O5(OH)4
11 (1 Tetrahedral sheet and 1 Octahedral
sheet) H-bonding between layers no internal
surfaces No Isomorphous substitution Low
CEC CEC due to variable charge Small distance
between layers (0.72 nm) Industrial Uses
ceramics, bricks, porcelain Building Material
Non-expanding 3D visualization
19Kaolinite (SEM)
Kaolintie growing on a Quartz Crystal
2021 Phyllosilicates
2 Main Types Expanding Non-Expanding
Smectite Illite
Vermiculite Chlorite
21Smectites (Smectite Family)
21 Very Expansive Mineral High
Shrink-Swell Lots of Substitution (both sheets)
High CEC Large Interlayers Internal
Surface Area Charge Balancing Cations and Water
fill interlayer space Building Hazard Sticky,
Plastic and Cohesive Montmorillonite
Na0.5(Al1.5Mg0.5)Si4O10(OH)2 - nH2O Mg replaces
Al in the octahedral sheet
22Montmorillonite SEM
http//www.glossary.oilfield.slb.com/DisplayImage.
cfm?ID163
23Montmorillonite SEM
http//webmineral.com/specimens/picshow.php?id128
5
24Expanding
25Weathering of Mica
 As micas weather the interlayer will
progressively become hydrated as K is released
from the structure. Mica -----gt
Illite ----gt Vermiculite--gtSmecti
te Interlayer dehydrated paritally
hydrated fully hydrated Charge
-1 0.6-0.8 0.6-0.9 / 0.25-0.6
26Illite
Weathering product from Muscovite (platy
structure) Isomorphous Substitution in the
Tetrahedral and Octahedral Sheets Less Layer
charge than Vermiculite Non-expanding Potassium
bound to tetrahedral layers
27Illite SEM
28Illite SEM
29Vermiculite
Lots of Substitution Very High CEC Al in
octahedral sheet and substituted for Si in
Tetrahedral Sheet Large Interlayer Space High
Internal Surface Area Less Shrink Swell than
Smectites Used as a Soil Medium in nurseries and
greenhouses / insulation Weathering product of
Muscovite Chemical Formula (MgFe,Al)3(Al,Si)4O1
0(OH)2.4H2O
30Vermiculite
Libby, Montana Mining Operation and Asbestos
Concerns
31Chlorite
211 One 21 layer and one 11 layer
32Chlorite SEM
33Types of Clays
Figure 8.7Â Â Schematic drawing illustrating the
organization of tetrahedral and octahedral sheets
in one 11-type mineral (kaolinite) and four
21-type minerals. The octahedral sheets in each
of the 21-type clays can be either aluminum
dominated or magnesium dominated. Note that
kaolinite is nonexpanding, the layers being held
together by hydrogen bonds. Maximum interlayer
expansion is found in smectite, with somewhat
less expansion in vermiculite because of the
moderate binding power of numerous Mg2 ions.
Fine-grained mica and chlorite do not expand
because K ions (fine-grained mica) or an
octahedral-like sheet of hydroxides of Al, Mg,
Fe, and so forth (chlorite) tightly bind the 21
layers together.
34Properties of Clays