SSSAJ Journal of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Education
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Published in Soil Sci Soc Am J 29:522-527 (1965)
© 1965 Soil Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Quantitative Determination of Vermiculite in Soils1

C. A. Alexiades and M. L. Jackson2

ABSTRACT

A chemical method based on potassium fixation was developed for quantitative determination of vermiculite in soils. The cation-exchange capacity (CEC) of a sample is determined by washing with CaCl2 and replacement of Ca with MgCl2. The sample is then washed with KCl, heated to 110C overnight to dehydrate and collapse the layers of vermiculite and to fix K. The K remaining exchangeable is determined by NH4Cl washings. The difference between these two CEC values gives the interlayer charge of vermiculite. A number of vermiculite standards and soil samples of widely different clay mineral compositions give remarkably near 100% totals when the vermiculite content is based on the average value of interlayer charge of 154 meq/100 g of vermiculite and when the other minerals present are appropriately determined (mica by K2O, chlorite by ignition loss, montmorillonite by CEC measured by non-fixed K, quartz and feldspar by Na2S2O7 fusion, allophane, kaolinite, and halloysite by selective dissolution in NaOH). The total CEC of vermiculite is 159 meq/100 g when the allocated external surface charge of 5 meq is included.


NOTES

1 Contribution from the Department of Soil Science, University of Wisconsin, Madison. Supported in part by a grant from Fulbright-Hays Act and through the Committee on International Exchange of Persons, Conference Board of Associate Research Councils, in part by a grant through the Research Committee of the Graduate School from the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation and in part by National Science Foundation grants G13793 and GP-4144—Jackson.

2 Associate Professor of Soil Science, University of Thessaloniki, Greece (on leave), and Professor of Soil Science, respectively.

Received for publication November 12, 1964. Accepted for publication June 18, 1965.







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The Plant Genome
Copyright © 1965 by the Soil Science Society of America.