Journal of Materials Research and Technology (Jul 2020)

Improved analysis methods to study the behavior of potassium ions in the interlayer of montmorillonite

  • Danchao Huang,
  • Gang Xie,
  • Pengfei Hu,
  • Sipei Hu,
  • Zhan Zhao,
  • Wai Li,
  • Mingyi Deng,
  • Pingya Luo

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 4
pp. 7754 – 7761

Abstract

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The behavior of potassium chloride (KCl) as a main mud shale inhibitor remains poorly defined in the interlayer of montmorillonite (Mt). In this paper, a new analysis method of transmission electron microscopy-energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (TEM-EDS) was established. The distribution of K+ in the interlayer of Mt and the processes surrounding d-spacing shifts in Mt were investigated through X-ray diffraction and TEM-EDS. The experimental results revealed shoulder peaks in the diffraction patterns at KCl concentrations between 11% and 19%. The distribution of K+ varied in the inner and outer layers of Mt with different KCl concentrations. It could be concluded that the distribution of K+ and the changes in d-spacing of Na are determined by two factors: negative charge sites and concentration difference. When the KCl concentration was below 8%, both factors cause the outer layer of Mt to adsorb more K+ than the inner layer, with all layers exhibiting d-spacings within the 1.50 nm state. At an 8% KCl concentration, all negative charge sites were occupied by K+. As the KCl concentration rose above 8%, the outer layer of Mt adsorbed more K+ than the inner layer due to the concentration difference. With a further increase in the KCl concentration, the d-spacing shifted linearly to 1.30 nm from the outer to the inner layer of Mt. All layers of Mt exhibited a d-spacing of 1.30 nm at KCl concentrations of up to 23%. These results demonstrate the benefits and capabilities of the proposed method in investigating the intercalating mechanisms of Mt.

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