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Chemical and Morphological Evidence for the Conversion of Smectite to Illite

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 April 2024

Atsuyuki Inoue
Affiliation:
Geological Institute, College of Arts & Sciences, Chiba University, Chiba 260, Japan
Norihiko Kohyama
Affiliation:
National Institute of Industrial Health, The Ministry of Labor, Nagao, Tama-ku, Kawasaki 213, Japan
Ryuji Kitagawa
Affiliation:
Faculty of Science, Hiroshima University, Higashisendamachi, Naka-ku, Hiroshima 730, Japan
Takashi Watanabe
Affiliation:
Joetsu University of Education, Joetsu, Nigata 943, Japan
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Abstract

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The continuous conversion of smectite to illite in samples from the Shinzan hydrothermal alteration area of Japan has been examined by X-ray powder diffraction (XRD) and transmission (TEM) and analytical transmission electron microscopy (AEM). TEM shows that randomly interstratified illite/ smectite (I/S) containing 100-50% expandable layers exhibits a flakey shape, whereas regularly and partially ordered interstratified I/S having 50-0% expandable layers exhibits a lath-like habit. An early- formed lath of regularly interstratified I/S is typically <35 Å in thickness and 300–500 Å in width; these dimensions gradually increase with decreasing percentage of expandable layers. XRD shows that the lathshaped I/S has a 1M polytype mica structure. AEM shows that the interlayer K content of flakey I/S increases monotonously with decreasing percentage of expandable layers in the range 100-50% expandable layers, whereas the interlayer K content of lath-shaped I/S increases along a different trend from that for the flakey I/S in the range 50-0% expandable layers. These observations suggest that randomly interstratified I/S is fundamentally smectite that is undergoing K-fixation and dissolution and that regularly and partially ordered interstratified I/S are immature illite which is still growing. Consequently, they suggest a mechanism for the hydrothermal smectite-to-illite conversion that is based on the K-fixation in and dissolution of smectite and the precipitation and growth of thin illite particles. Furthermore, these data suggest that the kinetics of smectite dissolution and illite growth are the most important factors controlling the smectite-to-illite conversion.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1987, The Clay Minerals Society

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