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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Changes in Ionic Concentration of Effluent
from Compaction of Clay
By
University of Houston M. S. thesis, 96 p., 23 figs., August, 1965
Samples of montmorillonite from Clay Spur, Wyoming and illite from Fithian,
Illinois were equilibrated with artificial sea water and experimentally compacted.
A constant pressure of 800 psi was applied and successive increments of filtrate
were collected and analyzed. During equilibration of the montmorillonite slurries, magnesium was preferentially
removed from the saturating solution by the clay particles. Upon
compacting the montmorillonite slurries, it was found that the effluent was
progressively enriched in sodium, potassium, and calcium and progressively depleted of magnesium. Within the pressure range utilized, each cation underwent
total concentration changes of 1 to 2 per cent of its initial concentration. The effluent is thought to be enriched in the three cations through increasing
replacement of sodium, calcium, and potassium by magnesium on the ion exchange sites of clay particles during compaction. Illite runs displayed no noticeable trends of enrichment or depletion during compaction. However, sodium apparently replaced calcium during equilibration. The enrichment of effluent during compaction is a mechanism that may produce the observed salinity increases with depth in
subsurface waters. Also, the preferential absorption of magnesium by clays of high cation exchange capacity
should contribute to the high calcium to magnesium ratio found in subsurface waters. This ratio is the reverse of that found in natural sea water, where the
concentration of magnesium is approximately three times that of calcium. End_Pages 24 and 25--------