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Forces Between Suspended Bentonite Particles

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2024

H. van Olphen*
Affiliation:
Shell Development Company, Houston, Texas, USA

Abstract

Purified sodium bentonite suspensions in water display rigidity at concentrations as low as about 2 percent. On addition of NaCl the yield stress decreases, but beyond about 5 meq/ liter of NaCl it increases. The same is true for the relative viscosities and the sediment volumes of more dilute suspensions. This is interpreted as a flocculation-deflocculation-floccu-lation sequence. The paradoxical phenomenon of flocculation of the clean suspensions is explained by the concept of positive edge charge of the clay plates, allowing positive edge to negative flat-surface flocculation.

Both the purified and the salt-flocculated gels show Bingham flow behavior. When Good-eve’s analysis of Bingham flow is applied, the linking force between the clay plates in the pure gels is computed at about 10−4 dyne.

The salt-flocculated gels show thixotropic hysteresis, whereas the pure gels set immediately after stirring. This means that there is no energy barrier for gelation in the pure gels, which is in line with the proposed mechanism of association due to Coulomb attraction. In the salt-flocculated gels there must be an energy barrier causing thixotropic hysteresis. This might be expected from the summation of residual double-layer repulsion and van der Waals attraction. Considering thixotropic stiffening as slow coagulation, the height of the energy barrier could be calculated from the thixotropic increase of the modulus of elasticity with time after previous shear breakdown of the structure. The reasonable value of 7 kT was found for the height of the energy barrier of a gel containing 30 meq/liter of NaCl.

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Clay Minerals Society 1955

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Footnotes

Publication No. 62, Shell Development Company, Exploration and Production Research Division, Houston, Texas.

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