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Mechanism of Reaction of Neutral Fluoride Solution with Layer Silicates and Oxides of Soils
Author(s) -
Huang P. M.,
Jackson M. L.
Publication year - 1965
Publication title -
soil science society of america journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.836
H-Index - 168
eISSN - 1435-0661
pISSN - 0361-5995
DOI - 10.2136/sssaj1965.03615995002900060021x
Subject(s) - chemistry , gibbsite , inorganic chemistry , fluoride , goethite , halloysite , kaolinite , persulfate , stoichiometry , nuclear chemistry , mineralogy , catalysis , geology , adsorption , organic chemistry , geochemistry
The rate of HCl titrable OH formed and reaction mechanism of layer silicates, oxides of Al and Fe, and soils in neutral 1 n KF solution were investigated with reference to the possible stoichiometric relationships to mineral bonded fluoride, extracted aluminum and iron, and titrable acidity in the residue. With vermiculite, montmorillonite, kaolinite, halloysite, allophane, chlorite, gibbsite, hematite, goethite, Dodge soil, Cookeville soil and Alberni soil, the formation of HCl titrable OH was rapid initially but approached an apparent equilibrium after 24 hours. The rate of reaction was again rapid upon removal of the reaction products and renewal of the extractant. The amount of titrable OH per unit weight of sample increased with increasing the ratio of fluoride solution volume to sample weight. The hydroxyl formed ranged from 10 meq/100 g of Dodge soil B2 horizon to 281 meq/100 g of halloysite and was not accompanied by any detectable amount of mineral bonded fluoride in the water‐ethanol washed residue. The amounts of aluminum or iron released in neutral 1 n NH 4 F, for example, 20 meq/100 g of hematite and 129 meq/100 g of Alberni soil, were nearly stoichiometric to the OH formed (19 to 131 meq/100 g, respectively) in neutral 1 n KF extract. This strongly indicated that the fluoride complexing reaction primarily with Al and secondarily Fe from the minerals was the reaction mechanism. The increase in the potentiometric NaOH titer, to the inflection point at pH 7.5 to 8, of the solid phase after fluoride treatment and washing was in general proportional to the amount of OH formed in the KF solution. For example, for montmorillonite these values were 32 and 37 meq/100 g, respectively. This gives evidence that the mineral surfaces were disrupted (a conclusion confirmed electronoscopically) by reaction in fluoride solutions, yielding NaOH titrable groups in the mineral where Al and Fe had been removed. Ground quartz (<0.5µ) was rather inert toward the neutral fluoride solutions.