Kinetics of silica-phase transitions
Abstract
In addition to the stable silica polymorph quartz, several metastable silica phases are present in Yucca Mountain. The conversion of these phases to quartz is accompanied by volume reduction and a decrease in the aqueous silica activity, which may destabilize clinoptilolite and mordenite. The primary reaction sequence for the silica phases is from opal or glass to disordered opal-CT, followed by ordering of the opal-CT and finally by the crystallization of quartz. The ordering of opal-CT takes place in the solid state, whereas the conversion of opal-CT takes place through dissolution-reprecipitation involving the aqueous phase. It is proposed that the rate of conversion of opal-CT to quartz is controlled by diffusion of defects out of a disordered surface layer formed on the crystallizing quartz. The reaction rates are observed to be dependent on temperature, pressure, degree of supersaturation, and pH. Rate equations selected from the literature appear to be consistent with observations at Yucca Mountain.
- Publication:
-
Unknown
- Pub Date:
- July 1993
- Bibcode:
- 1993kspt.book.....D
- Keywords:
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- Crystal Defects;
- Diffusion;
- Glass;
- Metastable State;
- Order-Disorder Transformations;
- Phase Stability (Materials);
- Phase Transformations;
- Quartz;
- Reaction Kinetics;
- Silicon Dioxide;
- Silicon Oxides;
- Surface Layers;
- Crystallization;
- Destabilization;
- Minerals;
- Ph;
- Silicates;
- Solid State;
- Supersaturation;
- Solid-State Physics