Group of common clay minerals that are hydrous aluminum silicates and constitute the principal ingredients of kaolin (china clay). The group includes kaolinite, dickite, nacrite, halloysite, and allophane. They are natural alteration products of feldspars, feldspathoids, and other silicates.
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{{Infobox mineral | name = Kaolinite | category = | boxwidth = | boxbgcolor = | image = KaoliniteUSGOV.jpg | caption = | formula = Al2Si2O5(OH)4 | color = White, sometimes red, blue or brown tints from impurities | habit = Earthy | system = triclinic | twinning = | cleavage = perfect on {001} | fracture = Perfect | mohs = 2 - 2.5 | luster = dull and earthy | refractive = α 1.553 - 1.565, β 1.559 - 1.569, γ 1.569 - 1.570 | opticalprop = | pleochroism = | streak = white | gravity = 2.16 - 2.68 | melt = | fusibility = | diagnostic = | solubility = | references = }} Kaolinite is a clay mineral with the chemical composition Al2Si2O5(OH)4. It is a layered silicate mineral, with one tetrahedral sheet linked through oxygen atoms to one octahedral sheet of alumina octahedra . Rocks that are rich in kaolinite are known as china clay or kaolin.
The name is derived from Gaoling or Kao-Ling ("High Hill") in Jingdezhen, Jiangxi province, China. Kaolinite was first described as a mineral species in 1867 for an occurrence in the Jari River basin of Brazil.
Kaolinite is one of the most common minerals; it is mined, as kaolin, in Brazil, France, United Kingdom, Germany, India, Australia, Korea, the People's Republic of China, and the USA.
Kaolinite has a low shrink-swell capacity and a low cation exchange capacity (1-15 meq/100g.) It is a soft, earthy, usually white mineral (dioctahedral phyllosilicate clay), produced by the chemical weathering of aluminium silicate minerals like feldspar. In many parts of the world, it is colored pink-orange-red by iron oxide, giving it a distinct rust hue. Lighter concentrations yield white, yellow or light orange colours. Alternating layers are sometimes found, as at Providence Canyon State Park in Georgia, USA.
Kaolinite clay occurs in abundance in soils that have formed from the chemical weathering of rocks in hot, moist climates - for example in tropical rainforest areas. Comparing soils along a gradient towards progressively cooler or drier climates, the proportion of kaolonite decreases, while the proportion of other clay minerals such as illite (in cooler climates) or smectite (in drier climates) increases. Such climatically-related differences in clay mineral content are often used to infer changes in climates in the geological past, where ancient soils have been buried and preserved.
2 Al2Si2O5(OH)4 —> 2 Al2Si2O7 + 4 H2O
Further heating to 925-950 °C converts metakaolin to a defect aluminum-silicon spinel, Si3Al4O12, which is sometimes also referred to as a gamma-alumina type structure:
2 Al2Si2O7 —> Si3Al4O12 + SiO2
Upon calcination to ~1050 °C, the spinel phase (Si3Al4O12) nucleates and transforms to mullite, 3 Al2O3 · 2 SiO2, and highly crystalline cristobalite, SiO2:
3 Si3Al4O12 —> 2 Si2Al6O13 + 5 SiO2
It is also used in paint to extend titanium dioxide (TiO2) and modify gloss levels; in rubber for semi-reinforcing properties and in adhesives to modify rheology.
The largest use is in the production of paper, including ensuring the gloss on some grades of paper. Commercial grades of kaolin are supplied and transported as dry powder, semi-dry noodle or as liquid slurry.
A more recent, and more limited, use is as a specially formulated spray applied to fruits, vegetables, and other vegetation to repel or deter insect damage. A traditional use is to soothe an upset stomach, similar to the way parrots (and later, humans) in South America originally used it. Until the early 1990s it was the active substance of anti-diarrhea medicine Kaopectate.
In April 2008, the Naval Medical Research Center announced the successful use of a Kaolinite-derived aluminosilicate nanoparticles infusion in traditional gauze known commercially as QuikClot® Combat Gauze. .
Kaolinite can contain very small traces of uranium and thorium, and is therefore useful in radiological dating. While a single magazine made using kaolin does not contain enough radioactive material to be detected by a security-oriented monitor, this does result in truckloads of high end glossy paper occasionally tripping an overly-sensitive radiation monitor.
The Eden Project, a large environmental complex near St Austell, Cornwall, England, is constructed in a disused china clay pit.
Sandersville, a small town in Georgia, USA, holds an annual kaolin festival every year. Sandersville has huge kaolin deposits throughout the town and the surrounding areas. The town is based on the kaolin industry.
When heated to between 650°C and 900°C kaolinite dehydroxylates to form Metakaolin. According to the American National Precast Concrete Association this is a supplementary cementitious material (SCM), when added to a concrete mix Metakaolin affects the acceleration of Portland cement hydration when replacing Portland cement by 20 percent by weight.
Ceramists, or more commonly potters, typically think of materials in terms of oxides, thus they write the formula for kaolinite as:
Al2O3 ▪ 2(SiO2) ▪ 2(H2O)
This format is also useful for describing the firing process of clay as the kaolin loses the 2 water molecules, termed the chemical water, when fired to a high enough temperature. This is different than clay's physical water which will be lost simply due to evaporation and is not a part of the chemical formula.