Title: Soils 201
1Soils 201
2Fig. 4.3. General relationship between particle
size and kinds of minerals present. Quartz
dominates the sand and coarse silt fractions.
Primary silicates such as the feldspars,
hornblende, and micas are present in the sands
and, in decreasing amounts, in the silt fraction.
Secondary silicates dominate the fine clay. Other
secondary minerals, such as iron and aluminum
oxides, are prominent in the fine silt and coarse
clay fractions.
3Kinds of Minerals in Soils
- Silicate minerals (the main kind in soils)
- Nonsilicate minerals
- The most common minerals in the sand- and
silt-size fraction are primary silicate minerals. - Most of the clay-sized particles in soils are
secondary (silicate and nonsilicate) minerals
formed in the soil from the weathering of primary
minerals.
4Minerals
- Primary mineral A mineral that has not been
altered chemically since deposition and
crystallization from molten lava. - Secondary mineral A mineral resulting from the
decomposition of a primary mineral or from the
reprecipitation of the products of decomposition
of a primary mineral.
5Silicate Minerals
- Primary silicate minerals Quartz, feldspar,
micas, hornblende, and augite. - Secondary silicate minerals Vermiculite,
montmorillonite, illite, chlorite, and kaolinite.
6Soil Colloids Inorganic and Organic Matter lt
0.001 mm in sizeFour Groups of Soil Colloids
- 1. Secondary silicate minerals (silicate clays)
- 2. Iron and aluminum oxides (other secondary
minerals) - 3. Amorphous clays (other secondary minerals)
- 4. Humus (decomposed organic matter)
7Figure 8.1Â Â Simplified representation of a
silicate clay crystal (micelle), its complement
of adsorbed cations, and ions in the surrounding
soil solution.
8Figure 8.3Â Â The basic molecular and structural
components of silicate clays.
9Silicate Clays
- Each silicate clay particle is a flat, platelike
crystal made of a series of layers, much like a
deck of cards. - Each layer, in turn, is composed of two to three
sheets. - There are two types of sheets a silica sheet and
an alumina sheet. - Silica and alumina sheets form a layer when they
bind to one another by sharing oxygen atoms. - The different stacking arrangements and specific
nature of these two sheets help determine the
different types of silicate clays in the soil.
10Figure 8.3Â Â The basic molecular and structural
components of silicate clays.
11Silica and Alumina Sheets
- The basic building block of the silica sheet is a
unit called the silica tetrahedron a silicon
atom surrounded by four oxygen atoms. - An interlocking plane of numerous tetrahedra
joined together by shared oxygens forms a silica
or tetrahedral sheet. - The basic unit of the alumina sheet is the
alumina octahedron an eight-sided building block
consisting of a core aluminum atom surrounded by
six hydroxyls or oxygens. - Large numbers of alumina octahedra, bound to each
other by shared oxygens and arranged in a plane,
comprise an alumina or octahedral sheet.
12Si-Tetrahedron a four-sided structure made up
of a silicon ion surrounded by four oxygen atoms.
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14Silicate Clays and Negative Charge
- Silicate clay particles carry a negative charge.
- Silicate clays can hold hundreds or thousands of
pounds of nutrient cations per acre furrow slice. - These held cations are called adsorbed cations.
- In addition to these adsorbed cations, silicate
clay particles hold numerous water molecules.
15Sources of Negative Charge of Silicate Clays
- Exposed crystal edges.
- Ionic or isomorphic substitution.
16Exposed Crystal Edges
- Exposed oxygen or hydroxyl groups at exposed
crystal edges are partly responsible for what has
been termed the pH-dependent charge of clay
minerals. - pH-dependent charge that portion of the total
charge of the soil particle which is affected by,
and varies, with pH. - At pH values of about 6 and above, hydrogen ions
can be replaced by other cations such as calcium
and magnesium.
17Exposed Crystal Edge
18Figure 8.11Â Â How pH-dependent charges develop at
the broken edge of a kaolinite crystal.
19Ionic or Isomorphic Substitution
- Ionic substitution is the replacement (during
clay formation) of one ion for another of similar
size in the clay layer and usually lower positive
valence. - The remaining excess negative charge attracts
cations from the soil solution. - These negative charges are not dependent on pH
and are commonly referred to as permanent
charges.
20Isomorphous Substitution
21Figure 8.4Â Â Simplified diagrams of octahedral
sheets in a silicate mineral illustrating the
effect of isomorphous substitution on the net
charge.