Dehydration transformation in Ca-montmorillonite

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Abstract

The present work deals with the dehydration transformation of Ca-montmorillonite in the temperature range 30°-500 °C. Thermal, infrared (IR), and X-ray diffraction (XRD) analyses were used to describe the thermal transformation. The microstructural and layer disorder parameters like crystallite size, r.m.s. strain (〈e2〉1/2), variation of interlayer spacing (g), and proportion of planes which were affected by the defect (γ), have all been calculated from the (001) basal reflection using the method of variance and Fourier line shape analysis. These investigations revealed that sample underwent transformation from hydrated phase to dehydrated phase at 200 °C, and as a consequence, its basal spacing collapsed from 16.02 angstroms (30 °C) to around 10 angstroms (200 °C). This transformation occurred through a wide range of temperature, i.e. within the range 120°-200 °C. The crystallite size was maximum at room temperature (30 °C), however, the size decreased with increasing temperature in the hydrated phase, whereas the size increased with increasing temperature for the dehydrated phase. The g, γ and 〈e2〉1/2 of the hydrated and the dehydrated phase increased and decreased, respectively with increase of heating temperature.

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Bala, P., Samantaray, B. K., & Srivastava, S. K. (2000). Dehydration transformation in Ca-montmorillonite. Bulletin of Materials Science, 23(1), 61–67. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02708614

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