Iron in Soils and Clay Minerals 1988
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-009-4007-9_15
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Structural Iron in Kaolinites and in Associated Ancillary Minerals

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Cited by 38 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…Degradation of kaolinite structure accompanied by partial introduction of Fe 3+ in octahedral positions was observed during tropical weathering in lateritic profiles (Nahon 1981;Jepson 1988). Degraded kaolinite with Fe 3+ within octahedra was encountered during the initial stages of transformation, observed within Recent grains with a rather negligible content of Fe 2 § For more developed phases of transformation, observed here within Miocene grains, Fe e+ prevailed over Fe 3 § and the Mg content was also high (Table 3).…”
Section: Discussion and Conclusion Environmental Factorsmentioning
confidence: 70%
“…Degradation of kaolinite structure accompanied by partial introduction of Fe 3+ in octahedral positions was observed during tropical weathering in lateritic profiles (Nahon 1981;Jepson 1988). Degraded kaolinite with Fe 3+ within octahedra was encountered during the initial stages of transformation, observed within Recent grains with a rather negligible content of Fe 2 § For more developed phases of transformation, observed here within Miocene grains, Fe e+ prevailed over Fe 3 § and the Mg content was also high (Table 3).…”
Section: Discussion and Conclusion Environmental Factorsmentioning
confidence: 70%
“…Most Fe-rich kaolinite flakes are Mg-free and differ from kaolinite only in Fe content. A relatively high iron content (0.6 to 1.0 cation per formula unit) may suggest that Fe-kaolinite originates from continental ferrallitic soils (Herbillon et al, 1976;Mestdagh et al, 1980;Nahon, 1981;Jepson, 1988;Stucki, 1988;Muller and Calas, 1993;Malengreau et al, 1994).…”
Section: Crystallochemical Markers Of Alteration and Neoformation Promentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Using oxalic acid, the dissolved iron can be precipitated from the leach solution as ferrous oxalate, which can be re-processed to form pure haematite by calcinations [6]. Many researchers have studied the use of oxalic acid to dissolve iron oxide on a laboratory scale [7][8][9][10][11][12][13]. Lee et al [14] used 0.19-0.48M oxalic acid to dissolve hydrated iron oxide.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%