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1.
J Contam Hydrol ; 264: 104357, 2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38729027

ABSTRACT

Most of the available data on diffusion in natural clayey rocks consider tracer diffusion in the absence of a salinity gradient despite the fact that such gradients are frequently found in natural and engineered subsurface environments. To assess the role of such gradients on the diffusion properties of clayey materials, through-diffusion experiments were carried out in the presence and absence of a salinity gradient using salt-diffusion and radioisotope tracer techniques. The experiments were carried out with vermiculite samples that contained equal proportions of interparticle and interlayer porosities so as to assess also the role played by the two types of porosities on the diffusion of water and ions. Data were interpreted using both a classical Fickian diffusion model and with a reactive transport code, CrunchClay that can handle multi-porosity diffusion processes in the presence of charged surfaces. By combining experimental and simulated data, we demonstrated that (i) the flux of water diffusing through vermiculite interlayer porosity was minor compared to that diffusing through the interparticle porosity, and (ii) a model considering at least three types of porous volumes (interlayer, interparticle diffuse layer, and bulk interparticle) was necessary to reproduce consistently the variations of neutral and charged species diffusion as a function of salinity gradient conditions.


Subject(s)
Aluminum Silicates , Clay , Salinity , Porosity , Diffusion , Clay/chemistry , Aluminum Silicates/chemistry , Water/chemistry , Ions/chemistry , Models, Theoretical
2.
Nat Commun ; 10(1): 5456, 2019 11 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31784523

ABSTRACT

The role of the preferential orientation of clay platelets on the properties of a wide range of natural and engineered clay-rich media is well established. However, a reference function for describing the orientation of clay platelets in these different materials is still lacking. Here, we conducted a systematic study on a large panel of laboratory-made samples, including different clay types or preparation methods. By analyzing the orientation distribution functions obtained by X-ray scattering, we identified a unique signature for the preferred orientation of clay platelets and determined an associated reference orientation function using the maximum-entropy method. This new orientation distribution function is validated for a large set of engineered clay materials and for representative natural clay-rich rocks. This reference function has many potential applications where consideration of preferred orientation is required, including better long-term prediction of water and solute transfer or improved designs for new generations of innovative materials.

3.
Materials (Basel) ; 11(10)2018 Oct 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30322150

ABSTRACT

The anisotropic properties of clay-rich porous media have significant impact on the directional dependence of fluids migration in environmental and engineering sciences. This anisotropy, linked to the preferential orientation of flat anisometric clay minerals particles, is studied here on the basis of the simulation of three-dimensional packings of non-interacting disks, using a sequential deposition algorithm under a gravitational field. Simulations show that the obtained porosities fall onto a single master curve when plotted against the anisotropy value. This finding is consistent with results from sedimentation experiments using polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) disks and subsequent extraction of particle anisotropy through X-ray microtomography. Further geometrical analyses of computed porous media highlight that both particle orientation and particle aggregation are responsible of the evolution of porosity as a function of anisotropy. Moreover, morphological analysis of the porous media using chord length measurements shows that the anisotropy of the pore and solid networks can be correlated with particle orientation. These results indicate that computed porous media, mimicking the organization of clay minerals, can be used to shed light on the anisotropic properties of fluid transfer in clay-based materials.

4.
Environ Sci Technol ; 52(4): 1899-1907, 2018 02 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29359924

ABSTRACT

Prediction of water and solute migration in natural clay-based materials requires a detailed understanding of the roles played by different porosity types (around or inside clay particles) on the overall transfer process. For smectite, a reference material for the design of migration models, this discrimination is complex because of osmotic swelling of the structure under water-saturated conditions. Diffusion experiments with a water tracer (HDO) were conducted on 0.1-0.2, 1-2, and 10-20 µm size fractions of Na-vermiculite, a swelling clay mineral with no osmotic swelling. Results obtained for the two finest fractions suggest that osmotic swelling and the associated impact on pore structure are responsible for the low De values reported in the literature for smectite compared to those of vermiculite. When considering only interparticle porosity, De values for vermiculite are similar to those reported for nonporous grains (Na-kaolinite and Na-illite). This indicates that interparticle porosity has a primary effect on the overall water diffusion process, whereas interlayer porosity is shown to imply a small proportion of HDO adsorption. This study provides evidence that vermiculite is a promising reference mineral for the understanding of the roles played by pore structure and mineral-water interaction in the transport properties of water in claystones and for associated refinement of dual-porosity diffusion models.


Subject(s)
Clay , Water , Aluminum Silicates , Diffusion , Minerals , Porosity
5.
ACS Omega ; 3(7): 7399-7406, 2018 Jul 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31458899

ABSTRACT

1H NMR pulsed gradient spin echo attenuation and water density profile analysis by magnetic resonance imaging are both used to determine the mobility of water molecules confined within a porous network of compacted kaolinite clay sample (total porosity of ∼50%). These two complementary experimental procedures efficiently probe molecular diffusion within time scales varying between milliseconds and few hours, filling the gap between the time scale of diffusion dynamics measured by traditional quasi elastic neutron scattering and through-diffusion methods. Furthermore, magnetic resonance imaging is a nondestructive investigation tool that is able to assess the effect of the local structure on the macroscopic mobility of the diffusing probe.

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