Title: X-Ray Diffraction for Soils
1X-Ray Diffraction for Soils
2X-Ray Diffraction
- Capabilities
- Crystallography
- How it works
- Sample Preparation
- Examples
3X-Ray Diffraction
- Mineral Identification ? Element Analysis
- independent of crystal size, small sample,
nondestructive, mixtures - Phases as little as 1-3 sample weight can be
identified - Qualitative or Quantitative
- Must be crystalline!
4Crystallography
- Unit Cell
- Crystals repeating structures
- Atoms form planes in the structure
enstatite
beryl
albite
fluorite
Perkins, 1998
5- Planes in a crystal
- Diffraction based on ? of X-rays and plane spacing
n
http//pubs.usgs.gov/of/of01-041/htmldocs/xrpd.htm
6The X-ray Diffractometer
- Cu source, X-ray beam, interaction with specimen
- Detector records diffraction pattern at varied
angles
http//pubs.usgs.gov/of/of01-041/htmldocs/xrpd.htm
7Powder XRD
- Powder, crystals in random orientations
- Goniometer swings through many angles
- Enough crystals, enough angles, get enough
diffraction to determine mineralogy
http//pubs.usgs.gov/of/of01-041/htmldocs/xrpd.htm
8XRD of Soils and Sample Prep.
- XRD used for Identification of Components
- Silicates, Clays, Carbonates, Oxides, some
organics?, etc - Need disaggregated, powdered samples for analysis
dry preferred - Additional sample preparation is needed for
detailed clay analyses
9Sample Problems Specific For Soils
- Methods depend on what question(s) you are asking
- Dry is preferred (bake at 100 ºC for 1 hr), but I
have run wet samples for fragile clays - Depending on the soil horizon - disaggregation
may be difficult, organic material may need to be
removed, cements may need to be dissolved - Claysif you see broader peaks in your pattern
10Clay Prep. and Analysis
- Clay fraction needs to be separated (by size) for
detailed analyses mix sample in water, clays
will be suspended, decant and centrifuge liquid
to concentrate the clays - Several methods for mounting the clays need to
orient them flat - Depending on the type of clay, further
preparation is needed
Tetrahedral Octahedral Tetrahedral
11Clay Prep. and Analysis
- Methods include
- Solvating with ethylene glycol or glycerol
(replaces water gives a constant interlayer
spacing) - Baking at various high temperatures to destroy
parts of the crystal structure - Saturating with cations (Mg, K, etc.) may produce
diagnostic structural changes - 14Ã…, 10Ã…, 7Ã… Clay Groups
1214Ã…, 10Ã…, 7Ã… Clay Groups
- Smectites (shrinking-swelling clays) 14Ã…,
greater than 14Ã… if interlayer water - Chlorite 14Ã… and 7Ã… peaks
- Kaolinite 7Ã… peak
- 10Ã… clays are Micas, Illite or Glauconite
- Vermiculite 14Ã… and ?Ã… depending on Mg, Na, Fe
- Sepiolite, Palygorskite, Halloysite check for
fibrous or tubular material in microscope first
13Additional Clay Problems
- Polytypes many clay have several polytypes that
may or may not be distinguishable in your
diffraction pattern - Interlayering different types of clays can
alternate (randomly or ordered ratios) producing
a completely different diffraction pattern - How important is it that you know exactly which
clay you have present?... - Determining Cations (for CEC) Since changing
cations may not alter the diffraction pattern, it
is generally preferable to use EDX-SEM to
determine the cations
14Examples
- Control 16Ã… peak and small peak at 10Ã…
- EG Solvated - 16Ã… shifted to 17Ã…
- Baked samples - 16Ã… peak collapses to 10Ã… peak
and small 5Ã… peak - What clay is it?
15Go To Software
16Clay Mineralogy
- Surface charges on clays affect their absorption
properties and their engineering properties - Ex. some clays allows water into their inner
layer and by doing so expand when wet and
contract when dry - Ex. other clay minerals exclude water from their
inner layer - Ex. Different clays bind different cations
- Cation Exchange Capacity
17Cation Exchange Capacity
- The amount of exchangeable cations a soil or
mineral is capable of retaining on its surface. - Charge balance of overall mineral is required
- CEC - ?Cations ? Anions 0
- CEC ?Cations ? Anions
18Calculation of Layer Charge and CEC for
Montmorillonite (M0.33Si4 Al1.67 (Mg2,Fe2)0.33)
Atom Z ½ cell Total charge
Si 4 4 16
Al(VI) 3 1.67 5
Mg or Fe2 2 0.33 0.66
O 2- 10 20-
OH 1- 2 2-
Total layer charge Total layer charge Total layer charge -0.33
Interlayer Charge (mol charge/mol clay) Interlayer Charge (mol charge/mol clay) 0.33
Formula weight for ½ cell of montmorillonite 359
g/mol Thus CEC of montmorillonite is 92 cmol/kg
-22
19Clay Mineral Properties
20From McBride 1994
21Hydrated Cations in Interlayer
From Schulze 2002
22c-axis Spacing of Clay Minerals
23Structural Impacts on Clay Mineral Properties (1)
- Isomorphic substitution creates overall negative
charge on clay layers. - To balance charge cations are adsorbed in the
interlayers.
From Goldberg 2000
24Structural Impacts on Clay Mineral Properties (2)
- Substitution originating in tetrahedral sheet
leads to stronger sorption of some cations (e.g.,
K) than isomorphic substitution in octahedral
sheet. - Shrink-swell characteristics of clay minerals are
dictated by the layer charge. - Edges of clay minerals have unsatisfied bonds and
thus can form covalent bonds with sorbates
25Surface Functional Groups on Clay Mineral Edges
Figure 5.3 from Sparks, 1995
26Sorption to Mineral Surfaces
- Heavy metals, organics, etc. can sorb to many
mineral surfaces - If the mineralogy (and field conditions like pH,
ppt, etc.) can be identified then the fate and
transport of contaminants can be modeled
27Additional Information
- http//www.tulane.edu/sanelson/eens211/x-ray.htm
- X-Ray Diffraction and the Identification and
Analysis of Clay Minerals Moore and Reynolds - Minerals in general - http//mineral.galleries.com
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