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Identification of halloysite (7 Å) by ethylene glycol solvation: the ‘MacEwan effect’
- Source :
- Clay Minerals. 37:487-496
- Publication Year :
- 2002
- Publisher :
- Mineralogical Society, 2002.
-
Abstract
- X-ray powder diffraction patterns of halloysite (7 Å) are characteristically altered following solvation with ethylene glycol. Some effect was first noted in the classic work of MacEwan but its value in the unequivocal identification of halloysite (7 Å ) seems to have been overlooked subsequently. The response to ethylene glycol solvation involves a decrease in the intensity (peak height) of the peak at ∼7.2 Å and an increase in the intensity (peak height) of the peak at ∼3.58 Å thus narrowing the 7.2 Å /3.58 Å peak height intensity ratio. For pure samples of halloysite, this ratio is narrowed by an average of ∼50%. This distinctive change is related to the interstratified nature of halloysite (7 Å), specifically the presence of ‘residual’ interlayer water, i.e. halloysite (10 Å), which can be replaced with ethylene glycol so forming 10.9 Å layers, a spacing that is almost exactly one and a half times the thickness of dehydrated (7.2 Å) layers which do not imbibe ethylene glycol. Thus the separation between the 001 peaks in the 7.2 Å /10.9 Å interstratification is increased and the 0027.2(3.58 Å) and 00310.9(3.63 Å) peaks become more or less coincident, compared to the 7.2 Å /10 Å interstratification, i.e. the partially hydrated state. The widespread use of ethylene glycol solvation in clay mineral studies makes it a particularly useful and simple test to determine the presence of halloysite. Pure halloysites should be readily identifiable and experiments indicate a ‘routine’ sensitivity of ∼20% halloysite in mixtures with kaolinite, although this will depend on factors such as ‘crystallinity’ and could be improved with careful attention to intensity measurements. It is proposed to call this phenomenon the ‘MacEwan effect’ in honour of its discoverer Douglas Maclean Clark MacEwan.
- Subjects :
- 010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences
Chemistry
Solvation
Analytical chemistry
engineering.material
010502 geochemistry & geophysics
Intensity ratio
01 natural sciences
Halloysite
Crystallinity
chemistry.chemical_compound
Geochemistry and Petrology
engineering
Organic chemistry
Kaolinite
Clay minerals
Ethylene glycol
Powder diffraction
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14718030 and 00098558
- Volume :
- 37
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Clay Minerals
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........fcb9393f13ec3db6d643715ac5be7762