Stable isotope geochemistry of clay minerals: "The story of sloppy, sticky, lumpy and tough" Cairns-Smith (1971)

S. M.F. Sheppard, H. A. Gilg

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

277 Scopus citations

Abstract

The equilibrium H- and O-isotope fractionations can be approximated by the following equations which are based on experimental, empirical and/or theoretical data: Hydrogen: 1000 In αkaolinite-water = -2.2 × 106 × T-2 - 7.7 Oxygen: 1000 In αkaolinite-water = 2.76 × 106 × T-2 - 6.75 1000 In αsmectite-water = 2.55 × 106 × T-2 - 4.05 1000 In αillite-water = 2.39 × 106 × T-2 - 3.76 The equilibrium H-isotope fractionation factors vs. 106 × T-2 for kaolinite and probably smectite and illite are monotonic curves between 350-0°C. More complex curves, with a minimum fractionation near 200°C, are probably influenced by surface effects and/or disequilibrium fractionations among the different hydrogen sites. The H-isotope fractionations between smectite-water increase by ∼70‰ from Fe-poor montmorillonite to nontronite at low temperatures. The pore-interlayer water in smectite H-isolope fractionation at low temperatures is ∼20±10‰. The presence of organic matter can modify both the δD value of the clay analysis and its 'water' content. Clays - kaolinite, illite, smectite and probably halloysite - tend to retain their D/H and 18O/16O ratios unless subjected to more extreme diagenetic or metamorphic conditions or special local processes. Kinetic information is still only qualitative: for comparable grain sizes, hydrogen exchanges more rapidly than oxygen in the absence of recrystallization. Low-temperature diffusion coefficients cannot be calculated with sufficient precision from the higher temperature exchange data. The H- and O-isotope studies of clays can provide useful information about their conditions of formation.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1-24
Number of pages24
JournalClay Minerals
Volume31
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 1996
Externally publishedYes

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Stable isotope geochemistry of clay minerals: "The story of sloppy, sticky, lumpy and tough" Cairns-Smith (1971)'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this