Smectite
A smectite is a mineral mixture of various swelling sheet silicates, which have a three-layer 2:1 structure and belong to the clay minerals. Smectites mainly consist of montmorillonite, but can often contain secondary minerals such as quartz and calcite.
Terminology
In clay mineralogy, smectite is synonym of montmorillonite to indicate a class of swelling clays. The term smectite is commonly used in Europe and in the UK while the term montmorillonite is preferred in North America, but both terms are equivalent and can be used interchangeably. For industrial and commercial applications, the term bentonite is mostly used in place of smectite or montmorillonite.Mineralogical structure
The 2:1 layer structure consists of two silica tetrahedral layers which are electrostatically cross-linked via an Al2O3, or Fe2O3, octahedral central layer. The TOT elementary layers are not rigidly connected to each other but are separated by a free space: the interlayer hosting hydrated cations and water molecules. Smectite can swell because of the reversible incorporation of water and cations in the interlayer space.The TOT layers are negatively charged because of the isomorphic substitution of Si atoms by Al atoms in the two external silica tetrahedral layers and because of the replacement of Al or Fe atoms by Mg2+ or Fe2+ cations in the inner gibbsite octahedral layer. As the +4 charges born by Si, and normally compensated by −4 charges from the surrounding oxygen atoms, become +3 due to the substitution of Si by Al, an electrical imbalance occurs: +3 −4 = −1. The excess of negative charges in the TOT layer has to be compensated by the presence of positive cations in the interlayer. The same reasoning also applies to the gibbsite central layer of the TOT elementary unit when an Al3+ ion is replaced by a Mg2+ ion in a gibbsite octahedra. The electrical imbalance is: +2 −3 = −1.
Role of interlayer cations in the swelling process
The main cations in the smectite interlayers are Na+ and Ca2+. The sodium cations are responsible for the highest swelling of smectite while calcium ions have lower swelling properties. Calcium smectite has significantly less swelling capacity than sodium smectite but is also less prone to shrinking when desiccated.The degree of hydration of the cations and their corresponding hydrated radii explain the swelling or the shrinking behaviour of phyllosilicates. Other cations such as Mg2+ and K+ ions exhibit even a more contrasted effect: highly hydrated magnesium ions are "swellers" as in vermiculite while poorly hydrated potassium ions are "collapsers" like in illite.
As the interlayer space of smectites is more open and so more easily accessible to water and cations, smectites exhibit the highest cation-exchange capacity of clay minerals commonly found in the soils. Only more expandable vermiculite and some rarer alumino-silicate minerals with inner channel structure can exhibit a higher CEC than smectite.