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Mineralogical Organization of Crystalline Silicate Clays

  • Crystalline silicate clays are classified based on the number and arrangement of tetrahedral (Si) and octahedral (Al, Mg, Fe) sheets in their crystal structure.
  • The two main groups are:

 

  1. 1:1 Silicate Clays (Kaolinite Group)

a) Structure: Each layer consists of one tetrahedral sheet and one octahedral sheet.

  • Example Minerals: Kaolinite, Halloysite, Nacrite, Dickite.

 

b) Bonding:

  • The tetrahedral and octahedral sheets are held together tightly by shared oxygen atoms.
  • Hydrogen bonding holds these layers together, making them non-expanding.

 

c) Properties:

  • No swelling when wetted (fixed structure).
  • Low cation exchange capacity (CEC) due to little isomorphous substitution.
  • Effective surface area is low (only external surfaces are active).
  • Large particle size (0.10 to 5 µm, mostly 0.2 to 2 µm).
  • Poor plasticity, cohesion, shrinkage, and swelling.

 

  1. 2:1 Silicate Clays

a) Structure:

  • Each layer consists of one octahedral sheet sandwiched between two tetrahedral sheets.

 

b) Subgroups:

  • Expanding clays – Smectite, Vermiculite.
  • Non-expanding clays – Fine-grained mica (Illite), Chlorite (2:1:1 type).
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