fbpx
Wikipedia

Tacharanite

Tacharanite is a calcium aluminium silicate hydrate (C-A-S-H) mineral of general chemical formula Ca12Al2Si18O33(OH)36 with some resemblance to the calcium silicate hydrate (C-S-H) mineral tobermorite. It is often found in mineral assemblage with zeolites and other hydrated calcium silicates.

Tachanarite
Globular, white tacharanite (diameter 2.5 mm) from Palagonia, Italy
General
CategoryMineral
Formula
(repeating unit)
Ca12Al2Si18O33(OH)36
IMA symbolTch[1]
Strunz classification9.HA.75
Dana classification72.3.2.6
Crystal systemMonoclinic
Space groupA-centered
Unit cella = 17.07 Å,
b = 3.65 Å,
c = 27.9 Å
β = 114.1°
Z = 1
V = 1,586.80 Å3
Identification
Formula mass2,180.68 g/mol[2]
ColorMilky white
Crystal habitCryptocrystalline
CleavagePerfect {001}
FractureConchoidal
TenacityTough
Mohs scale hardness5
LusterVitreous, earthy, dull
StreakWhite
DiaphaneityTranslucent
Specific gravity2.33 – 2.36
Density2.33 – 2.36 g/cm3
Calculated: 2.28 g/cm3
Optical propertiesBiaxial
Refractive indexnα = 1.518 – 1.525 nγ = 1.530 – 1.537
Birefringence0.0120
DispersionRelatively strong
FusibilityDecompose
Common impuritiesFe, Mg, Na, K
Other characteristicsNon radioactive
References[2][3][4]

C-S-H and C-A-S-H mineral phases are important hydration products of cements but can also be found, although much less frequently, in natural conditions in particular geological environments. The natural specimens are rare and of small size (often available only in limited quantity) but often well crystallised while the hydrated cement phases are disordered and cryptocrystalline or amorphous with a poorly defined stoichiometry denoted by the use of dashes in the abbreviations C-S-H and C-A-S-H.

Etymology edit

Tachanarite (pronunciation as tă·kherenait: /tɑːkɑːrɑːnt/) was named by Sweet et al. (1961) from the Gaelic word "tacharan", a changeling, "an object or a thing left in place of a thing stolen" alluding to the initially presumed instability of this mineral because after the first X-rays photographic examination it was thought to be unstable when exposed to air and prone to decompose into tobermorite and gyrolite.[5] The name tachanarite was inspired both by the nature of the supposed mineral behaviour and the wealth of folklore associated with the Isle of Skye where it was found.[5]

Stability of the crystal structure edit

According to Sweet et al. (1961)[5] and Cliff et al. (1975),[6] tacharanite shows some close resemblances to tobermorite, a calcium silicate hydrate (C-S-H) mineral but also significantly differs from it because it contains aluminium in its crystal lattice, making it a member of the calcium aluminium silicate hydrates (C-A-S-H) family. Tacharanite has a monoclinic crystal structure.

Cliff et al. (1975)[6] have also studied the stability of tacharanite standing in air but could not evidence any change. The results of their study thus contradict these of the very first work of Sweet et al. (1961) reporting the change of tacharanite into a mixture of tobermorite and gyrolite which was the main source of inspiration for the mineral name.

A possible explanation for this discrepancy could reside in the impure nature and the quite limited quantity of the mineral samples that Sweet et al. (1961) have studied: they only worked onto a few milligrams (29 mg) of a complex mixture of several minerals very difficult to separate (amongst others, tacharanite, tobermorite and gyrolite...) and nested in the vesicles of the olivine-dolerite intrusive rock.

In 2007, on the basis of a larger number of tacharanite samples, a team of mineralogists from the Russian Academy of Sciences at Moscow (Organova et al., 2007) have comprehensively revisited the crystal structure of this poorly studied mineral.[7] From the tobermorite structure, they derived a model of the tacharanite structure and also established a relationship with a possible zeolite-like structure. Based on these information, they proposed a tentative mechanism of formation considering the overall close presence of zeolite in the systems where tacharanite is found.

Chemical composition edit

The general chemical composition of tacharanite is most often reported as Ca12Al2Si18O33(OH)36.[3][2] Cliff et al. (1975)[6] mention an equivalent composition of Ca12Al2Si18O69H36, simply written without expliciting the OH groups.

However, the tacharanite composition is sometimes referred as Ca12Al2Si18O51 · 18H2O,[4] or as Ca12Al2[Si6O17]3 · 18H2O,[8] an equivalent notation more explicit for the silicate structure.

Finally, an enigmatic, and less hydrated composition, of Ca12Al2Si18O15(OH)2 · 3H2O[9] is mentioned in the case of a synthesis report on the Maqarin natural analogue.

There is no uncertainties on the content in calcium, aluminium and silicon whose relative ratios are always the same: Ca12Al2Si18. However, the number of oxygen atoms or OH groups present in the hydrate chemical formula can vary, depending on the literature source, and is thus more uncertain, perhaps legitimating the tacharan roots of the name. This aspect needs to be verified before performing geochemical modeling calculations.

Natural occurrences edit

 
Spherical, cream-coloured tacharanite on white Na-phillipsite (a mineral series of the zeolite group) from Palagonia, northern Iblean plateau, Sicily, Italy (field of view 1 cm).

Tacharanite was first identified by Sweet et al. (1961) in vesicles of an intrusive igneous rock injected into a vein in the parent rock) at a small outcrop at Portree, Trotternish, Isle of Skye, Inner Hebrides islands, Highland of Scotland, UK. Tacharanite is associated there with other hydrated calcium silicates (tobermorite, gyrolite and xonotlite) and zeolites (aluminosilicates: laumontite, mesolite, thomsonite, and analcime) also found in neighbouring localities.[5] It was first presumed by Sweet et al. (1961) to be a new member of the tobermorite group.[5]

In 1961, tacharanite was also identified in Tasmania (Australia) by Sutherland who made a second parallel discovery of the mineral quasi at the same time as Sweet et al. (1961), but published his results later.[10]

Tacharanite natural occurrence has also been considered in the frame of the characterization works and geochemical modelling of the natural analogue sites of Khushaym Matruk and Maqarin in central and northern Jordan where natural alkaline plumes are driven in the rock formation by the diffusion of very basic fluids with a high pH.[9]

Tacharanite is also present in the clastic dikes of the Hatrurim basin (western flank of the Dead Sea) studied as natural analogues of alkaline concrete.[11]

Natural analogue studies inspired by the first works on natural calcium silicate hydrates, closely related to the chemistry of cement,[12] are performed to better understand the behaviour of an alkaline perturbation developing around the galleries of a cementitious radioactive waste repository.

Cement hydration products edit

C-S-H (the "cement glue") and C-A-S-H phases are essential phases of the hardened cement paste (HCP) contributing to the development of the concrete strength. They are formed by the hydration of the cement clinker and ground granulated blast-furnace slags (GGBFS). Harry F. W. Taylor, eminent cement chemist at the University of Aberdeen (Scotland, UK), was a pioneer and an indefatigable artisan in their detailed characterisation.[13][14][15][12] This explains the interest of Taylor, Cliff, and their colleagues[6] for reappraising in 1975 the crystal structure and the stability of tachanarite, a decade after the two parallel discoveries in 1961 of the mineral by Sweet et al.[5] at Portree (Isle of Skye, Scotland) and Sutherland[10] in Tasmania.

Cement–clay interactions edit

Tacharanite has received additional attention in the context of natural analogue studies undertaken to investigate the possible effects of an alkaline plume developing around a high-level radioactive waste repository.[16]

In the frame of the geological disposal of high-level radioactive waste and spent fuel, large amounts of concrete will be used in the near-field of a deep geologic repository. Cementitious materials will serve as waste immobilization matrix, buffer materials, backfill materials, and also for the lining of galleries (shotcrete and concrete blocks). The high pH prevailing in concrete pore water is beneficial for immobilizing radionuclides (low solubility, high sorption and limitation of the microbial activity). Since the mid-1980, many studies were initiated after the pioneering works of Atkinson et al. (1985, 1988, 1990) at UKAEA (Harwell) to assess the time dependence of pH in a radioactive waste repository.[17][18][19] Simultaneously, also emerged the question of the geochemical perturbation induced by an alkaline plume developing in an argillaceous environment. Indeed, the integrity of the repository near field could be compromised as large quantities of concrete will be placed in direct contact with the host rock (clay sedimentary formation or granite). The pore water of the hardened cement paste (HCP) of concrete is hyperalkaline with a high pH. When Portland cement is used, young cement water (YCW) rich in potassium hydroxide (KOH) and sodium hydroxide (NaOH) has initially a very high pH of ~ 13.5. Latter in the cement degradation stages, evolved cement water (ECW) has a pH of 12.5 controlled by the dissolution of portlandite (Ca(OH)
2
). The hydroxide anions (OH) released by the concrete in contact with clay pore water, or granite groundwater, slowly diffuse into the host geological formation where they interact with the various mineral phases of the surrounding rock. Inside a backfilled gallery, and in the seals of drifts and shafts the same process will also affect the clay minerals of the bentonite buffer material. Water-rock interactions lead to complex dissolution and precipitation reactions at the interface between cement and clay materials. The main reaction products of an alkaline plume in clay are calcium silicate hydrates (C-S-H) and zeolites potentially contributing to clogging the porosity at the cement-clay interface.

As tacharanite is a member of the family of the calcium aluminium silicate hydrates (C-A-S-H), it has also been identified as a potentially newly formed minerals in the frame of the cement–clay interactions and taken into account for the geochemical modelling studies.[20][21]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Warr, Laurence N. (18 May 2021). "IMA–CNMNC approved mineral symbols". Mineralogical Magazine. 85 (3): 291–320. Bibcode:2021MinM...85..291W. doi:10.1180/mgm.2021.43. eISSN 1471-8022. ISSN 0026-461X. S2CID 235729616.
  2. ^ a b c Barthelmy, Dave. "Tacharanite Mineral Data". webmineral.com. Retrieved 27 December 2022.
  3. ^ a b Mindat. "Tacharanite". mindat.org. Retrieved 27 December 2022.
  4. ^ a b Handbook of Mineralogy (2001). "Tacharanite" (PDF). handbookofmineralogy.org. Retrieved 27 December 2022.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Sweet, Jessie M.; Bothwell, D. I.; Williams, D. L. (June 1961). "Tacharanite and other hydrated calcium silicates from Portree, Isle of Skye". Mineralogical Magazine and Journal of the Mineralogical Society. 32 (253): 745–753. Bibcode:1961MinM...32..745S. doi:10.1180/minmag.1961.032.253.01. ISSN 0369-0148.
  6. ^ a b c d Cliff, G.; Gard, J. A.; Lorimer, G. W.; Taylor, H. F. W. (June 1975). "Tacharanite". Mineralogical Magazine. 40 (310): 113–126. Bibcode:1975ClMin..40..113C. doi:10.1180/minmag.1975.040.310.01. eISSN 1471-8022. ISSN 0026-461X. S2CID 251027830.
  7. ^ Organova, N. I.; Zadov, A. E.; Chukanov, N. V.; Dubinchuk, V. T.; Kuznetsova, O. Yu.; Trubkin, N. V.; Levitskaya, L. A.; Marsii, I. M. (May 2007). "Structural model of the rare mineral tacharanite and a possible process of its formation". Bulletin of the Russian Academy of Sciences: Physics. 71 (5): 635–637. Bibcode:2007BRASP..71..635O. doi:10.3103/S1062873807050115. eISSN 1934-9432. ISSN 1062-8738. S2CID 120673718.
  8. ^ Stefan Weiß (2008). Das große lapis mineralienverzeichnis. Alle mineralien von A – Z und ihre eigenschaften [The great lapis mineral index. All minerals from A – Z and their properties] (5. Completely revised and supplemented ed.). München, Germany: Weise. ISBN 978-3-921656-70-9.
  9. ^ a b Pitty, A.F.; Alexander, W.R., eds. (2011). A natural analogue study of cement buffered, hyperalkaline groundwaters and their interaction with a repository host rock IV: an examination of the Khushaym Matruk (central Jordan) and Maqarin (northern Jordan) sites. An international project jointly funded by NDA-RWMD, ANDRA, CEA, JAEA, Nagra and SKB. Bedrock Geosciences Technical Report 11-02 (BG-TR-11-02) (Report).
  10. ^ a b Sutherland, F. L. (December 1976). "Tacharanite from Tasmania, Australia". Mineralogical Magazine. 40 (316): 887–890. Bibcode:1976MinM...40..887S. doi:10.1180/minmag.1976.040.316.10. eISSN 1471-8022. ISSN 0026-461X. S2CID 51731879.
  11. ^ Sokol, E. V.; Gaskova, O. L.; Kozmenko, O. A.; Kokh, S. N.; Vapnik, E. A.; Novikova, S. A.; Nigmatulina, E. N. (November 2014). "Clastic dikes of the Hatrurim basin (western flank of the Dead Sea) as natural analogues of alkaline concretes: Mineralogy, solution chemistry, and durability". Doklady Earth Sciences. 459 (1): 1436–1441. Bibcode:2014DokES.459.1436S. doi:10.1134/S1028334X14100122. eISSN 1531-8354. ISSN 1028-334X. S2CID 128411979.
  12. ^ a b Taylor, Harry F. W. (1997). Cement Chemistry. Thomas Telford. ISBN 978-0-7277-2592-9.
  13. ^ Taylor, Harry F. W. (1959). "The chemistry of cement hydration". Progress in Ceramic Science. 1: 89–145.
  14. ^ Taylor, Harry F. W. (1960). "Aspects of the crystal structures of calcium silicates and aluminates". Journal of Applied Chemistry. 10 (8): 317–323. doi:10.1002/jctb.5010100802. eISSN 1934-998X. ISSN 0021-8871.
  15. ^ Taylor, Harry F.W. (1986). "Proposed structure for calcium silicate hydrate gel". Journal of the American Ceramic Society. 69 (6): 464–467. doi:10.1111/j.1151-2916.1986.tb07446.x. eISSN 1551-2916. ISSN 0002-7820.
  16. ^ Linklater, C.M., ed. (1998). A natural analogue study of cement buffered, hyperalkaline groundwaters and their interaction with a repository host rock: Phase II. Nirex Science Report, S-98-003, UK Nirex, Harwell, U.K. (Report).
  17. ^ Atkinson, Alan (1985). The time dependence of pH within a repository for radioactive waste disposal. AERE R11777 (Report). Harwell: UK Atomic Energy Agency, UKAEA.
  18. ^ Atkinson, Alan; Everitt, Nicoia M.; Guppy, Richard M. (1988). "Time dependence of pH in a cementitious repository". MRS Proceedings. 127. doi:10.1557/PROC-127-439. eISSN 1946-4274. ISSN 0272-9172.
  19. ^ Atkinson, A.; Hearne, J. A.; Knights, C. F. (1990). "Thermodynamic modelling and aqueous chemistry in the CaO-Al2O3-SiO2-H2O system". MRS Proceedings. 212. doi:10.1557/PROC-212-395. eISSN 1946-4274. ISSN 0272-9172.
  20. ^ Gaucher, Eric C.; Blanc, Philippe (January 2006). "Cement/clay interactions – A review: Experiments, natural analogues, and modeling". Waste Management. 26 (7): 776–788. Bibcode:2006WaMan..26..776G. doi:10.1016/j.wasman.2006.01.027. ISSN 0956-053X. PMID 16574392. S2CID 6387343.
  21. ^ Savage, David; Walker, Colin; Arthur, Randy; Rochelle, Chris; Oda, Chie; Takase, Hiro (January 2007). "Alteration of bentonite by hyperalkaline fluids: A review of the role of secondary minerals". Physics and Chemistry of the Earth, Parts A/B/C. 32 (1–7): 287–297. Bibcode:2007PCE....32..287S. doi:10.1016/j.pce.2005.08.048. ISSN 1474-7065.

Further reading edit

  • McConnell, J. D. C. (March 1954). "The hydrated calcium silicates riversideite, tobermorite, and plombierite". Mineralogical Magazine and Journal of the Mineralogical Society. 30 (224): 293–305. Bibcode:1954MinM...30..293M. doi:10.1180/minmag.1954.030.224.02. ISSN 0369-0148.
  • Hodgkinson, Emily, Sarah (1998). The mineralogy and geochemistry of cement/rock interactions – PhD thesis (Proquest number 10729393) (Thesis). The University of Manchester (United Kingdom). Retrieved 26 December 2022.{{cite thesis}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Hodgkinson, Emily S.; Hughes, Colin R. (January 1999). "The mineralogy and geochemistry of cement/rock reactions: high-resolution studies of experimental and analogue materials". Geological Society, London, Special Publications. 157 (1): 195–211. Bibcode:1999GSLSP.157..195H. doi:10.1144/GSL.SP.1999.157.01.15. eISSN 2041-4927. ISSN 0305-8719. S2CID 129652188.
  • Savage, David; Noy, David; Mihara, Morihiro (March 2002). "Modelling the interaction of bentonite with hyperalkaline fluids". Applied Geochemistry. 17 (3): 207–223. Bibcode:2002ApGC...17..207S. doi:10.1016/S0883-2927(01)00078-6. ISSN 0883-2927.

External links edit

  • Mindat. "Tacharanite". mindat.org. Retrieved 27 December 2022.
  • Webmineral. "Tacharanite Mineral Data". webmineral.com. Retrieved 27 December 2022.
  • Handbook of mineralogy. "Tacharanite" (PDF). handbookofmineralogy.org. Retrieved 27 December 2022.

tacharanite, confused, with, anarakite, calcium, aluminium, silicate, hydrate, mineral, general, chemical, formula, ca12al2si18o33, with, some, resemblance, calcium, silicate, hydrate, mineral, tobermorite, often, found, mineral, assemblage, with, zeolites, ot. Not to be confused with Anarakite Tacharanite is a calcium aluminium silicate hydrate C A S H mineral of general chemical formula Ca12Al2Si18O33 OH 36 with some resemblance to the calcium silicate hydrate C S H mineral tobermorite It is often found in mineral assemblage with zeolites and other hydrated calcium silicates TachanariteGlobular white tacharanite diameter 2 5 mm from Palagonia ItalyGeneralCategoryMineralFormula repeating unit Ca12Al2Si18O33 OH 36IMA symbolTch 1 Strunz classification9 HA 75Dana classification72 3 2 6Crystal systemMonoclinicSpace groupA centeredUnit cella 17 07 A b 3 65 A c 27 9 A b 114 1 Z 1 V 1 586 80 A3IdentificationFormula mass2 180 68 g mol 2 ColorMilky whiteCrystal habitCryptocrystallineCleavagePerfect 001 FractureConchoidalTenacityToughMohs scale hardness5LusterVitreous earthy dullStreakWhiteDiaphaneityTranslucentSpecific gravity2 33 2 36Density2 33 2 36 g cm3Calculated 2 28 g cm3Optical propertiesBiaxialRefractive indexna 1 518 1 525 ng 1 530 1 537Birefringence0 0120DispersionRelatively strongFusibilityDecomposeCommon impuritiesFe Mg Na KOther characteristicsNon radioactiveReferences 2 3 4 C S H and C A S H mineral phases are important hydration products of cements but can also be found although much less frequently in natural conditions in particular geological environments The natural specimens are rare and of small size often available only in limited quantity but often well crystallised while the hydrated cement phases are disordered and cryptocrystalline or amorphous with a poorly defined stoichiometry denoted by the use of dashes in the abbreviations C S H and C A S H Contents 1 Etymology 2 Stability of the crystal structure 3 Chemical composition 4 Natural occurrences 5 Cement hydration products 6 Cement clay interactions 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEtymology editTachanarite pronunciation as tă kherenait t ɑː k ɑː r ɑː n aɪ t was named by Sweet et al 1961 from the Gaelic word tacharan a changeling an object or a thing left in place of a thing stolen alluding to the initially presumed instability of this mineral because after the first X rays photographic examination it was thought to be unstable when exposed to air and prone to decompose into tobermorite and gyrolite 5 The name tachanarite was inspired both by the nature of the supposed mineral behaviour and the wealth of folklore associated with the Isle of Skye where it was found 5 Stability of the crystal structure editAccording to Sweet et al 1961 5 and Cliff et al 1975 6 tacharanite shows some close resemblances to tobermorite a calcium silicate hydrate C S H mineral but also significantly differs from it because it contains aluminium in its crystal lattice making it a member of the calcium aluminium silicate hydrates C A S H family Tacharanite has a monoclinic crystal structure Cliff et al 1975 6 have also studied the stability of tacharanite standing in air but could not evidence any change The results of their study thus contradict these of the very first work of Sweet et al 1961 reporting the change of tacharanite into a mixture of tobermorite and gyrolite which was the main source of inspiration for the mineral name A possible explanation for this discrepancy could reside in the impure nature and the quite limited quantity of the mineral samples that Sweet et al 1961 have studied they only worked onto a few milligrams 29 mg of a complex mixture of several minerals very difficult to separate amongst others tacharanite tobermorite and gyrolite and nested in the vesicles of the olivine dolerite intrusive rock In 2007 on the basis of a larger number of tacharanite samples a team of mineralogists from the Russian Academy of Sciences at Moscow Organova et al 2007 have comprehensively revisited the crystal structure of this poorly studied mineral 7 From the tobermorite structure they derived a model of the tacharanite structure and also established a relationship with a possible zeolite like structure Based on these information they proposed a tentative mechanism of formation considering the overall close presence of zeolite in the systems where tacharanite is found Chemical composition editThe general chemical composition of tacharanite is most often reported as Ca12Al2Si18O33 OH 36 3 2 Cliff et al 1975 6 mention an equivalent composition of Ca12Al2Si18O69H36 simply written without expliciting the OH groups However the tacharanite composition is sometimes referred as Ca12Al2Si18O51 18H2O 4 or as Ca12Al2 Si6O17 3 18H2O 8 an equivalent notation more explicit for the silicate structure Finally an enigmatic and less hydrated composition of Ca12Al2Si18O15 OH 2 3H2O 9 is mentioned in the case of a synthesis report on the Maqarin natural analogue There is no uncertainties on the content in calcium aluminium and silicon whose relative ratios are always the same Ca12Al2Si18 However the number of oxygen atoms or OH groups present in the hydrate chemical formula can vary depending on the literature source and is thus more uncertain perhaps legitimating the tacharan roots of the name This aspect needs to be verified before performing geochemical modeling calculations Natural occurrences edit nbsp Spherical cream coloured tacharanite on white Na phillipsite a mineral series of the zeolite group from Palagonia northern Iblean plateau Sicily Italy field of view 1 cm Tacharanite was first identified by Sweet et al 1961 in vesicles of an intrusive igneous rock injected into a vein in the parent rock at a small outcrop at Portree Trotternish Isle of Skye Inner Hebrides islands Highland of Scotland UK Tacharanite is associated there with other hydrated calcium silicates tobermorite gyrolite and xonotlite and zeolites aluminosilicates laumontite mesolite thomsonite and analcime also found in neighbouring localities 5 It was first presumed by Sweet et al 1961 to be a new member of the tobermorite group 5 In 1961 tacharanite was also identified in Tasmania Australia by Sutherland who made a second parallel discovery of the mineral quasi at the same time as Sweet et al 1961 but published his results later 10 Tacharanite natural occurrence has also been considered in the frame of the characterization works and geochemical modelling of the natural analogue sites of Khushaym Matruk and Maqarin in central and northern Jordan where natural alkaline plumes are driven in the rock formation by the diffusion of very basic fluids with a high pH 9 Tacharanite is also present in the clastic dikes of the Hatrurim basin western flank of the Dead Sea studied as natural analogues of alkaline concrete 11 Natural analogue studies inspired by the first works on natural calcium silicate hydrates closely related to the chemistry of cement 12 are performed to better understand the behaviour of an alkaline perturbation developing around the galleries of a cementitious radioactive waste repository Cement hydration products editC S H the cement glue and C A S H phases are essential phases of the hardened cement paste HCP contributing to the development of the concrete strength They are formed by the hydration of the cement clinker and ground granulated blast furnace slags GGBFS Harry F W Taylor eminent cement chemist at the University of Aberdeen Scotland UK was a pioneer and an indefatigable artisan in their detailed characterisation 13 14 15 12 This explains the interest of Taylor Cliff and their colleagues 6 for reappraising in 1975 the crystal structure and the stability of tachanarite a decade after the two parallel discoveries in 1961 of the mineral by Sweet et al 5 at Portree Isle of Skye Scotland and Sutherland 10 in Tasmania Cement clay interactions editTacharanite has received additional attention in the context of natural analogue studies undertaken to investigate the possible effects of an alkaline plume developing around a high level radioactive waste repository 16 In the frame of the geological disposal of high level radioactive waste and spent fuel large amounts of concrete will be used in the near field of a deep geologic repository Cementitious materials will serve as waste immobilization matrix buffer materials backfill materials and also for the lining of galleries shotcrete and concrete blocks The high pH prevailing in concrete pore water is beneficial for immobilizing radionuclides low solubility high sorption and limitation of the microbial activity Since the mid 1980 many studies were initiated after the pioneering works of Atkinson et al 1985 1988 1990 at UKAEA Harwell to assess the time dependence of pH in a radioactive waste repository 17 18 19 Simultaneously also emerged the question of the geochemical perturbation induced by an alkaline plume developing in an argillaceous environment Indeed the integrity of the repository near field could be compromised as large quantities of concrete will be placed in direct contact with the host rock clay sedimentary formation or granite The pore water of the hardened cement paste HCP of concrete is hyperalkaline with a high pH When Portland cement is used young cement water YCW rich in potassium hydroxide KOH and sodium hydroxide NaOH has initially a very high pH of 13 5 Latter in the cement degradation stages evolved cement water ECW has a pH of 12 5 controlled by the dissolution of portlandite Ca OH 2 The hydroxide anions OH released by the concrete in contact with clay pore water or granite groundwater slowly diffuse into the host geological formation where they interact with the various mineral phases of the surrounding rock Inside a backfilled gallery and in the seals of drifts and shafts the same process will also affect the clay minerals of the bentonite buffer material Water rock interactions lead to complex dissolution and precipitation reactions at the interface between cement and clay materials The main reaction products of an alkaline plume in clay are calcium silicate hydrates C S H and zeolites potentially contributing to clogging the porosity at the cement clay interface As tacharanite is a member of the family of the calcium aluminium silicate hydrates C A S H it has also been identified as a potentially newly formed minerals in the frame of the cement clay interactions and taken into account for the geochemical modelling studies 20 21 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tacharanite nbsp Look up tacharanite in Wiktionary the free dictionary C S H calcium silicate hydrate Main product of the hydration of Portland cement Gyrolite Rare phyllosilicate mineral crystallizing in spherules Tobermorite Inosilicate alteration mineral in metamorphosed limestone and in skarn Xonotlite Inosilicate mineral List of mineralsReferences edit Warr Laurence N 18 May 2021 IMA CNMNC approved mineral symbols Mineralogical Magazine 85 3 291 320 Bibcode 2021MinM 85 291W doi 10 1180 mgm 2021 43 eISSN 1471 8022 ISSN 0026 461X S2CID 235729616 a b c Barthelmy Dave Tacharanite Mineral Data webmineral com Retrieved 27 December 2022 a b Mindat Tacharanite mindat org Retrieved 27 December 2022 a b Handbook of Mineralogy 2001 Tacharanite PDF handbookofmineralogy org Retrieved 27 December 2022 a b c d e f Sweet Jessie M Bothwell D I Williams D L June 1961 Tacharanite and other hydrated calcium silicates from Portree Isle of Skye Mineralogical Magazine and Journal of the Mineralogical Society 32 253 745 753 Bibcode 1961MinM 32 745S doi 10 1180 minmag 1961 032 253 01 ISSN 0369 0148 a b c d Cliff G Gard J A Lorimer G W Taylor H F W June 1975 Tacharanite Mineralogical Magazine 40 310 113 126 Bibcode 1975ClMin 40 113C doi 10 1180 minmag 1975 040 310 01 eISSN 1471 8022 ISSN 0026 461X S2CID 251027830 Organova N I Zadov A E Chukanov N V Dubinchuk V T Kuznetsova O Yu Trubkin N V Levitskaya L A Marsii I M May 2007 Structural model of the rare mineral tacharanite and a possible process of its formation Bulletin of the Russian Academy of Sciences Physics 71 5 635 637 Bibcode 2007BRASP 71 635O doi 10 3103 S1062873807050115 eISSN 1934 9432 ISSN 1062 8738 S2CID 120673718 Stefan Weiss 2008 Das grosse lapis mineralienverzeichnis Alle mineralien von A Z und ihre eigenschaften The great lapis mineral index All minerals from A Z and their properties 5 Completely revised and supplemented ed Munchen Germany Weise ISBN 978 3 921656 70 9 a b Pitty A F Alexander W R eds 2011 A natural analogue study of cement buffered hyperalkaline groundwaters and their interaction with a repository host rock IV an examination of the Khushaym Matruk central Jordan and Maqarin northern Jordan sites An international project jointly funded by NDA RWMD ANDRA CEA JAEA Nagra and SKB Bedrock Geosciences Technical Report 11 02 BG TR 11 02 Report a b Sutherland F L December 1976 Tacharanite from Tasmania Australia Mineralogical Magazine 40 316 887 890 Bibcode 1976MinM 40 887S doi 10 1180 minmag 1976 040 316 10 eISSN 1471 8022 ISSN 0026 461X S2CID 51731879 Sokol E V Gaskova O L Kozmenko O A Kokh S N Vapnik E A Novikova S A Nigmatulina E N November 2014 Clastic dikes of the Hatrurim basin western flank of the Dead Sea as natural analogues of alkaline concretes Mineralogy solution chemistry and durability Doklady Earth Sciences 459 1 1436 1441 Bibcode 2014DokES 459 1436S doi 10 1134 S1028334X14100122 eISSN 1531 8354 ISSN 1028 334X S2CID 128411979 a b Taylor Harry F W 1997 Cement Chemistry Thomas Telford ISBN 978 0 7277 2592 9 Taylor Harry F W 1959 The chemistry of cement hydration Progress in Ceramic Science 1 89 145 Taylor Harry F W 1960 Aspects of the crystal structures of calcium silicates and aluminates Journal of Applied Chemistry 10 8 317 323 doi 10 1002 jctb 5010100802 eISSN 1934 998X ISSN 0021 8871 Taylor Harry F W 1986 Proposed structure for calcium silicate hydrate gel Journal of the American Ceramic Society 69 6 464 467 doi 10 1111 j 1151 2916 1986 tb07446 x eISSN 1551 2916 ISSN 0002 7820 Linklater C M ed 1998 A natural analogue study of cement buffered hyperalkaline groundwaters and their interaction with a repository host rock Phase II Nirex Science Report S 98 003 UK Nirex Harwell U K Report Atkinson Alan 1985 The time dependence of pH within a repository for radioactive waste disposal AERE R11777 Report Harwell UK Atomic Energy Agency UKAEA Atkinson Alan Everitt Nicoia M Guppy Richard M 1988 Time dependence of pH in a cementitious repository MRS Proceedings 127 doi 10 1557 PROC 127 439 eISSN 1946 4274 ISSN 0272 9172 Atkinson A Hearne J A Knights C F 1990 Thermodynamic modelling and aqueous chemistry in the CaO Al2O3 SiO2 H2O system MRS Proceedings 212 doi 10 1557 PROC 212 395 eISSN 1946 4274 ISSN 0272 9172 Gaucher Eric C Blanc Philippe January 2006 Cement clay interactions A review Experiments natural analogues and modeling Waste Management 26 7 776 788 Bibcode 2006WaMan 26 776G doi 10 1016 j wasman 2006 01 027 ISSN 0956 053X PMID 16574392 S2CID 6387343 Savage David Walker Colin Arthur Randy Rochelle Chris Oda Chie Takase Hiro January 2007 Alteration of bentonite by hyperalkaline fluids A review of the role of secondary minerals Physics and Chemistry of the Earth Parts A B C 32 1 7 287 297 Bibcode 2007PCE 32 287S doi 10 1016 j pce 2005 08 048 ISSN 1474 7065 Further reading editMcConnell J D C March 1954 The hydrated calcium silicates riversideite tobermorite and plombierite Mineralogical Magazine and Journal of the Mineralogical Society 30 224 293 305 Bibcode 1954MinM 30 293M doi 10 1180 minmag 1954 030 224 02 ISSN 0369 0148 Hodgkinson Emily Sarah 1998 The mineralogy and geochemistry of cement rock interactions PhD thesis Proquest number 10729393 Thesis The University of Manchester United Kingdom Retrieved 26 December 2022 a href Template Cite thesis html title Template Cite thesis cite thesis a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Hodgkinson Emily S Hughes Colin R January 1999 The mineralogy and geochemistry of cement rock reactions high resolution studies of experimental and analogue materials Geological Society London Special Publications 157 1 195 211 Bibcode 1999GSLSP 157 195H doi 10 1144 GSL SP 1999 157 01 15 eISSN 2041 4927 ISSN 0305 8719 S2CID 129652188 Savage David Noy David Mihara Morihiro March 2002 Modelling the interaction of bentonite with hyperalkaline fluids Applied Geochemistry 17 3 207 223 Bibcode 2002ApGC 17 207S doi 10 1016 S0883 2927 01 00078 6 ISSN 0883 2927 External links editMindat Tacharanite mindat org Retrieved 27 December 2022 Webmineral Tacharanite Mineral Data webmineral com Retrieved 27 December 2022 Handbook of mineralogy Tacharanite PDF handbookofmineralogy org Retrieved 27 December 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tacharanite amp oldid 1194806873, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.