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Dep. of Soil Science, North Carolina State Univ., Box 7619, Raleigh, NC 27695-7619
Dep. of Soil and Environmental Science, Univ. of California, Riverside, CA 92521
*Corresponding author.
ABSTRACT
To further understand the colloidal behavior of clay minerals in soils, rheological properties of illite suspensions were investigated and related to colloidal stability. Using a concentric cylinder viscometer to measure shear stress as a function of shear rate, Bingham yield stresses (
B) and plastic viscosities (
pl) were determined for homoionic Na- and K-saturated illite suspensions varying in pH, NaCIO4 or KCIO4 concentration, and suspended solids concentration. For a given Na or K concentration,
B typically decreased with increasing pH. At a given pH >5.5, both
B and
pl increased with increasing electrolyte concentration; but for Na-illite, constant values of
B and
pl were observed at higher electrolyte concentrations. The Na or K concentration yielding the greatest increase in
B or
pl per unit increase in concentration was usually less than, but correlated with, published critical coagulation concentrations (CCCs) of Na- or K- illite. With increasing solids concentration at pH 7,
B increased curvilinearly for unstable suspensions and linearly for stable suspensions. In light of published models of non-Newtonian flow, data for unstable suspensions at pH 7 suggested that interparticle bonding energy or the number times energy of bonds within flocs was greater for K-illite in 25 mol K m–3 than for Na-illite in 60 mol Na m–3.
Contribution from the Dep. of Soil and Environmental Sciences, Univ. of California, Riverside and the Institute for Soil Fertility Research, Haren, the Netherlands.
Received for publication January 27, 1992.
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