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Thermal Analysis and Thermal Reactions of Smectites: a Review of Methodology, Mechanisms, and Kinetics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2024

Arkadiusz Derkowski*
Affiliation:
Institute of Geological Sciences, Polish Academy of Sciences, Senacka 1, 31-002 Krakow, Poland
Artur Kuligiewicz
Affiliation:
Institute of Geological Sciences, Polish Academy of Sciences, Senacka 1, 31-002 Krakow, Poland
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Abstract

Smectites are a group of minerals traditionally analyzed by thermal methods due to their exceptionally large adsorbed-water contents and the presence of OH groups, which makes them unique among all common soil- and rock-forming minerals. The dehydration reaction of smectite is a low-temperature endothermic effect that ends typically below 200°C. Although the removal of bulk interlayer water requires activation energy (Ea) of just above 30 kJ/mol, the removal of the last few H2O molecules attached strongly to interlayer cations requires Ea > 100 kJ/mol. Dehydroxylation is the loss of structural OH groups that proceeds as evolution of H2O molecules out of the smectite structure and occurs in the 300–900°C range. In trioctahedral species, dehydroxylation is combined with recrystallization and proceeds usually at > 700°C. In dioctahedral species, the temperature of dehydroxylation is controlled by the type of octahedral vacancy, having trans-vacant and cis-vacant distinguished by the boundary at ~ 600°C, and by the octahedral cation–OH bond strength, following the order Mg > Al > Fe. The Ea of dehydroxylation correlates linearly with the temperature of maximum dehydroxylation; from > 170 kJ/mol for Cs+-exchanged beidellite and nontronite, through ~ 300 kJ/mol in Mg-rich montmorillonite, to > 500 kJ/mol in trioctahedral saponite. Dehydration and dehydroxylation of smectites can be accompanied by a number of other phenomena, such as dehydrogenation or defluorination. At high temperatures, smectite amorphization and recrystallization occurs. Unless amorphized and/or recrystallized, smectites can undergo rehydration and rehydroxylation, which are opposite reactions to dehydration and dehydroxylation, respectively. This review discusses the details of the above-mentioned thermal reactions of smectites, focusing on thermogravimetric methods, evolved gas analysis, and structural alterations. Factors affecting the accuracy and precision of thermal analysis of smectite are discussed along with examples of best laboratory practices. The paper also provides the most recent description and critical evaluation of smectite reaction kinetics.

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Type
Review
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium,provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © 2023 The Authors.
Figure 0

Fig. 1 An example of TGA and DTG curves of samples representing almost-pure dioctahedral (SCa-3 montmorillonite) and trioctahedral (high-charge synthetic saponite; Pelletier et al., 2003) smectites. The dehydration reaction at <200°C is followed by dehydroxylation above ~300°C, which are shown in the corresponding MS signal of H2O (m/z = 18 and 17). Thermal removal of carboxyl groups from organic impurities and the decomposition of carbonate impurities are demonstrated by the CO2 (m/z = 44) signal below 500°C and above 600°C, respectively. The analysis was performed under dry N2 at a flow of 100 mL/min, with a constant heating rate of 20°C/min. Ion currents not to scale. Note: All natural smectite samples shown here and in the following figures come from the Source Clays Repository of The Clay Minerals Society. Unless specified otherwise, all thermal analyses presented in this paper were performed using a TA Discovery TGA (USA) instrument and ThermoStar GDS 320 MS from Pfeiffer (Göttingen, Germany); ~20 mg of loosely packed powder, using a wide 50 µL Platinum HT sample pan without a lid

Figure 1

Table 1 The hydration enthalpy (–ΔHo) after Smith (1977) and effective ionic radii for a given coordination number of inorganic cations commonly occurring in smectite interlayers in natural conditions and used in laboratory experiments, after Shannon (1976)

Figure 2

Fig. 2 DTG curves in the temperature range corresponding to the dehydration of Na+-, Ca2+-, and La3+-exchanged montmorillonites. The analysis was performed under dry N2 at a flow of 50 mL/min, with a constant heating rate of 5°C/min

Figure 3

Fig. 3 DTG curves showing the difference in dehydroxylation of trans-vacant (tv) and cis-vacant (cv) dioctahedral smectites along their dominating octahedral cation-OH composition (after Derkowski et al., 2012a). Analysis preformed under dry N2 at 50 mL/min flow, with a constant heating rate of 5°C/min

Figure 4

Fig. 4 DTG curves of smectite reference samples saturated with various inorganic cations. The analysis was performed under a 100 mL/min flow of dry N2, with 4 h isothermal heating at the temperatures indicated on the figures, followed by heating to 1000°C at a constant rate of 5°C/min

Figure 5

Fig. 5 The effect of cation migration into the octahedral sheet. DTG curves of Li+-exchanged and Mg2+-exchanged montmorillonites preheated isothermally under a flow of 100 mL/min of dry N2 for 4 h at various temperatures (as stated in the legend) followed by heating to 1000°C at a constant rate of 5°C/min. The DTG curves of the SCa-2 sample saturated with other cations and preheated isothermally at 300°C are given as reference

Figure 6

Fig. 6 Rehydration of a smectite reference sample (SWy-3), saturated with cations of contrasting hydration enthalpy, at various temperatures, after prior in situ drying for 4 h at 200°C. Mass gain is shown as fractional mass gain at a constant H2O content of 9 g/kg air (not constant RH), normalized to the sample mass after drying at 200°C

Figure 7

Fig. 7 An example of an in-situ experiment of an isothermal rehydroxylation reaction observed with TGA (after Derkowski & Kuligiewicz, 2017) on a Cs+-exchanged beidellite (SBId-1) and montmorillonite (SWy-2). Note the initial dehydroxylation to 800°C under dry gas and switching to H2O-rich gas for isothermal rehydroxylation, then secondary dehydroxylation to 1000°C under dry gas. The mass gain under wet gas corresponds to the rebuilding of OH groups

Figure 8

Fig. 8 The texture (upper) and DTG pattern (lower) of unsifted and sifted Ca2+-exchanged montmorillonite sample (SCa-3) after heating to >1000°C at a constant rate of 20°C/min (DTG pattern) and 500°C/min under a flow of 50 mL/min dry N2 gas

Figure 9

Fig. 9 TGA patterns of Li+- and Ca2+-exchanged montmorillonite (SWy-2) heated isothermally for 4 h at temperatures as indicated in the legend followed by ramp-heating at 10°C/min under a flow of 50 mL/min of dry N2. Note the abrupt mass loss at almost the same temperature in Li+-exchanged samples, originating from the sample dropping off the holder

Figure 10

Fig. 10 The examples of linear, ramp-heating of a Na+-beidellite sample to 1000°C under a 50 mL/min flow of dry N2 and at various heating rates. The rates are indicated at the DTG peak in °C/min. The shift between the DTGmax peaks can be used to determine the activation energy of dehydroxylation

Figure 11

Fig. 11 A, C–F Activation energy (Ea) of the dehydroxylation of various dioctahedral smectites, calculated using the 0.01 α-increments and the Friedman method, and B an example of Ea determination using the Kissinger method and the DTG peak temperature (Fig. 10). Note the similarity of the Ea values and trends in the dehydroxylation of two Ca2+-exchanged Mg-rich montmorillonites (E, F). For each TGA run, the total mass loss upon dehydroxylation was divided into 100 portions of equal mass difference (0.01α). For each 0.01α, the ln(dα/dt) was plotted against the corresponding 1/T using four or five data points from the TGA curves recorded with a different heating rate (B). E Ea is then calculated from the slope of ln(dα/dt) vs 1/T plot (Eq. 8). The correlation coefficient, R2, was computed for each of 0.01α. All Ea values shown (A, C–F) are reported for R2 > 0.997 (arbitrary cut-off),

Figure 12

Table 2 Comparison of the Ea of dehydration of weakly bound water (WBW) and strongly bound water (SBW) from studies employing various methods

Figure 13

Fig. 12 The Ea of dehydroxylation of smectite reference samples presenting values averaged over α = 0.2–0.8 calculated using the Friedman method (upper, cf. Figure 11) and Ea calculated using the conventional Kissinger method based on DTG peak temperature (lower, cf. Fig. 10), plotted against the maximum of dehydroxylation (DTGmax; Table 3). The Ea error in the Kissinger method is ~5%. Filled shapes denote the Cs+-exchanged form; note their lower position with respect to other cations

Figure 14

Table 3 Ea of dehydroxylation calculated as using the 0.01 α-increments with values averaged over α = 0.2–0.6 calculated using the Friedman method (Fig. 11) and Ea calculated using the conventional Kissinger method based on DTG peak temperature (Fig. 10). The maximum of dehydroxylation (DTGmax) was determined using the 5°C/min constant rate TG measurement

Figure 15

Fig. 13 An example of the calculation of Ea of smectite dehydroxylation for Ca2+-saturated SCa-3 montmorillonite based on a heating–cooling cycles TGA experiment (Drits et al., 2012a). The maximum temperature (in °C) of each consecutive heating cycle is given in italics. Compare Ea values with Fig. 11e