Abstract

This paper reports on the new application of polarized extended X-ray absorption fine structure (P-EXAFS) spectroscopy to fine-grained layer silicates taking the Garfield nontronite as a case study. Up to now application of P-EXAFS to structural studies of layer silicates has been restricted to single phyllosilicate crystals (Manceau et al. 1988; Manceau et al. 1990), but we show here that P-EXAFS can rigorously be applied to self-supporting clay films without loss of spatial resolution. The quantitative analysis of P-EXAFS requires however the preparation of highly oriented clay films, the orientation distribution of which can be assessed by texture goniometry. The Fe K-edge linear dichroism measurements were simulated by abinitio EXAFS modeling performed on a nontronite cluster whose structure was refined by distance-valence least-squares calculations. It is shown that ab initio modeling quantitatively accounts for the angular dependence of experimental EXAFS spectra. These calculations allowed for the identification of the fundamental character of single- and multiple-scattering paths of the photoelectron, and the structural interpretation of all spectral features observed up to 6.5 A for the in-plane and out-of-plane radial structure functions of nontronite. In practice, P-EXAFS measurements allow the determination of the flattening angle of Fe(O,OH)6 octahedra, cations distribution in the octahedral sheet with an enhanced sensitivity, and differentiation between dioctahedral and trioctahedral structures.

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