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Article

Evolution of Black Talc upon Thermal Treatment

1
Hunan Key Laboratory of Mineral Materials and Application, School of Minerals Processing and Bioengineering, Central South University, Changsha 410083, China
2
Engineering Research Center of Nano-Geomaterials of Ministry of Education, China University of Geosciences, Wuhan 430074, China
3
Faculty of Materials Science and Chemistry, China University of Geosciences, Wuhan 430074, China
4
Key Laboratory of Functional Geomaterials in China Nonmetallic Minerals Industry, China University of Geosciences, Wuhan 430074, China
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Minerals 2022, 12(2), 155; https://doi.org/10.3390/min12020155
Submission received: 4 January 2022 / Revised: 22 January 2022 / Accepted: 24 January 2022 / Published: 27 January 2022
(This article belongs to the Section Clays and Engineered Mineral Materials)

Abstract

:
Black talc is a natural silicate clay mineral with a typical 2:1 layered structure, low electrical conductivity, large specific surface area, and high thermal stability. The world’s largest black talc mine, with known reserves of one billion tons, is located in China’s Jiangxi province. Due to the restriction of its color, the application of black talc is only limited to ceramic raw materials, coating filler, waterproof materials, and other low-end application industries. Thermal treatment is a common method of clay mineral modification. It is vital to examine the structural and physical changes of black talc during calcination in order to prepare black-talc-based composites and to broaden their applications. This work discusses the evolution of black talc upon thermal treatment (30–1000 °C) and the corresponding structural changes. The thermal stability of minerals was analyzed via thermogravimetric (TG) analysis and thermogravimetry–mass spectrometry (TG-MS). The decomposition of minerals during calcination consists of four processes: dehydration, organic carbon decomposition, dihydroxylation, and phase transformation. In situ FTIR and in situ XRD were employed to track changes in black talc in real time during thermal treatment. At 800 °C, black talc was found to begin to go through dihydroxylation, and the crystallinity index decreased significantly. The XRD pattern of samples at 950 °C (T950) showed the reflection of the enstatite structure, and the relative crystallinity index was 27.3%, indicating that the mineral had undergone phase transformation. In addition, the Brunauer–Emmet–Teller (BET), laser particle size analyzer, Zeta potential, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) techniques were used to systematically characterize the physicochemical properties of minerals at different temperatures. The results show that black talc’s particle size and specific surface area increase with the calcination temperature. The surface charge changes, and more amorphous SiO2 and MgO appear, indicating that thermal treatment could induce structural changes and activate the surface of black talc.

1. Introduction

Clay minerals are abundant in nature, constituting approximately half of the lithosphere and worn crust. Clay minerals have diverse morphologies, such as nanosheet [1], nanotube [2], nano-rod [3], and many more. They are mainly composed of silicon, oxygen, aluminum, magnesium, and other elements, and their particle size is less than 0.01 mm [4,5]. Clay minerals such as halloysite [6,7,8], montmorillonite [9,10], diatomite [11], kaolinite [12], talc [13], and palygorskite [14] have garnered significant attention in recent years for their potential use in nanocomposite synthesis [15,16,17]. For example, in kaolinite intercalation compounds, novel drug delivery systems (DDSs) have been successfully synthesized by introducing organic guest species with different chain lengths between layers of lamellar kaolinite [18]. Composites with a tunable antibacterial activity were successfully obtained by loading Fe2O3 nanoparticles on the surface of modified kaolinite nanosheets [19]. Halloysite nanotubes surface grafted with distearoyl phosphoethanolamine can be used to load the antitumor drug paclitaxel (PTX), achieving a loading capacity of 18.44% and drug release which is close to 100% [20].
Talc is a hydroxylated, magnesium-rich, layered silicate that consists of SiO4 tetrahedral sheets and MgO4(OH)2 octahedral sheets in a 2:1 ratio [21,22]. Talc, a natural layered clay mineral with good thermal stability, hydrophobicity, and adsorption properties, has been used in numerous applications [23,24]. Black talc is a unique talc, containing organic carbon between layers which makes it darker than pure talc. China has the world’s largest black talc mine, located in Guangfeng County, Jiangxi Province, with proven reserves of more than 1 billion tons [25]. Due to its high thermal stability and high whiteness after calcination, black talc is mainly fired for producing ceramics [26,27]. Nevertheless, the use of clay minerals in functional composites is becoming more and more common, and clay minerals are emerging as a highly significant strategic resource for the world’s economies [28,29,30]. Due to the limitation of black talc’s color and single processing mode, however, the main application of black talc at the present stage is limited only to traditional firing or firing of ceramics and to other low-end industries. In addition, calcination is a common processing method of talc, but the structure and property changes that talc undergoes during heat treatment are not clear, which seriously limits the application of its calcined products in composite materials. Therefore, a systematic study of the morphology, surface properties, and crystal structure of black talc is of great theoretical significance to realize the functional design of black talc. At the same time, the study of its crystal chemical and material properties is helpful to discover the unique material properties of black talc and guide the material application and processing technology of black talc to achieve the goal of improving the industrial application value of black talc.
Using black talc in functional composites requires an understanding of the structure and characteristics of black talc during calcination at different temperatures. This study investigates the thermal stability of black talc using the thermogravimetry/differential scanning calorimetry (TG/DSC) and thermogravimetry–mass spectrometry (TG–MS) techniques, and tracks the structural changes of black talc in real time during thermal treatment via in situ X-ray diffraction (XRD) and in situ Fourier transform infrared spectrometry (FTIR). Furthermore, the physicochemical properties of minerals at different temperatures were systematically characterized using the Brunauer–Emmet–Teller (BET), laser particle size analyzer, Zeta potential, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) techniques, with the goal of providing a theoretical foundation for studying calcined black talc in composite materials.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Materials

This work addresses original black talc minerals obtained from Guangfeng County (Jiangxi Province, China), containing talc and a small number of impurities (including quartz, dolomite, and organic carbon). Table 1 shows the chemical composition of the samples according to the oxides analyzed via XRF.

2.2. Experiments

2.2.1. Thermal Treatment

Calcined black talc samples were obtained via continuous heating of original black talc, labeled as T100, T200, T300, T400, T500, T550, T600, T650, T700, T750, T800, T850, T900, T950, and T1000 (representing the target temperatures of 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 550, 600, 650, 700, 750, 800, 850, 900, 950, and 1000 °C). A laboratory-programmable muffle furnace was used to calcine black talc, in which the program was set to start from 30 °C (Talc), the heating rate was 10 °C/min, and each sample was kept at its target temperature for 120 min. When the muffle furnace temperature dropped to room temperature, the calcined black talc was taken out to study the effect of the calcination temperature.

2.2.2. Quantitative Analysis of Amorphous SiO2 and MgO Contents

After thermal treatment, the crystal structure of black talc is destroyed, and the Mg and Si are converted to amorphous MgO and SiO2. Moreover, alkaline and acidic solutions can leach SiO2 and MgO, respectively. Specifically, 1 g of different calcined samples was added into 25 mL of 2 M H2SO4 solution and 25 mL of 4 M NaOH solution, respectively, and stirred at 70 °C for 4 h. Finally, the leached material was filtered and washed, and the filtrates were analyzed using the inductively coupled plasma technique.

2.2.3. Characterizations

The chemical composition of black talc was examined using a wavelength dispersive X-ray fluorescence spectrometer (XRF, PANalytical Axios, Amsterdam, the Netherlands). Thermogravimetric and differential scanning calorimetric studies (TG/DSC, NETZSCH STA 449F3, Selb, Germany) were carried out to determine the thermal stability of raw black talc at a heating rate of 10 °C/min from 30 to 1000 °C. Thermal analysis using thermogravimetry–mass spectrometry (TG-MS, Rigaku thermo plus EV2, Tokyo, Japan) provides qualitative and quantitative information on the thermal decomposition pathway and thermal stability of pristine black talc. The test temperature ranged from 25 to 1000 °C, and the heating rate was 10 °C/min. In situ variable temperature X-ray diffraction (XRD, PANalytical Empyrean, Amsterdam, the Netherlands) was used in real time to track physical phase composition and crystal structure changes in raw black talc during the thermal treatment process, in which the sample was heated from 30 to 1000 °C (heating rate 10 °C/min). Each target temperature was held for 10 min for scanning ranging from 5° to 90°, with a speed of 4 °/min. Using in situ Fourier transform infrared (FTIR, Thermo Scientific Nicolet iS50, Waltham, MA, USA) spectrometry, the infrared spectral changes of calcined samples were recorded with a wavenumber range of 4000–550 cm−1, scan number 64, and resolution 8 cm−1. In addition, the samples Talc, T800, and T900 were tested separately. A gas sorption instrument (BET, Quantachrome NOVA 4200e, Boynton Beach, FL, USA) was used to study the N2 adsorption–desorption isotherms of samples. The Brunauer–Emmett–Teller and Barett–Joyner–Halenda methods were used to calculate the specific surface area and pore size distribution. A laser particle size distributor (Bettersize, BT-9300HT, Dandong, China) measured the particle size of different calcined samples. Inductively coupled plasma emission spectrometry (ICP, Spectro Blue II, Kleve, Germany) was used to quantify amorphous SiO2 and MgO in samples. The Zeta potential of samples at various pH values was determined using a nanoparticle size and Zeta potential analyzer (Malvern Zetasizer Nano ZS/ZEN3500, Malvern, UK). NaOH and H2SO4 solutions were used to adjust the pH. The morphologies of samples were observed using a field emission scanning electron microscope (SEM, ZEISS Gemini SEM 300, Oberkochen, Germany) equipped with an energy-dispersive spectrometer (EDS) at a 2 kV accelerating voltage. The sample was observed using a transmission electron microscope (TEM, JEOL JEM-2100F, Tokyo, Japan) at a voltage of 200 kV; the SEAD patterns can be utilized to estimate the sample’s degree of crystallization.

3. Results and Discussion

3.1. Thermal Stability of Raw Black Talc

Thermal analysis techniques were utilized to investigate heat absorption, exotherm, and mass changes in minerals during thermal treatment. The TG–DSC curves show that the mass loss of pristine black talc can be divided into four recession stages during the calcination process (30–1000 °C) (Figure 1a). During the first stage (from 30 to 165 °C), the quality loss is 0.32%, primarily due to black talc lacking interlayer water and having a feeble physical adsorbed water-binding force, indicating its weight loss below 165 °C. The intensity of water (m/z = 18) in the MS curves is close to 0 at about 152 °C (Figure 1b), indicating the disappearance of adsorbed water. The second stage is 165–580 °C, with a quality loss of 0.65% and a weak endothermic valley appearing at 336.7 °C. Clearly, there is a peak in the m/z = 44 MS curve at 600 °C (Figure 1b), which shows that CO2 is increasing. Thus, the oxidation of interlayer organic carbon within black talc occurs at this stage [31]. The maximum quality loss of mineral at 580–1000 °C (mass loss of 7.02%) corresponds to the decomposition reaction of ore. In particular, the decomposition reaction of ore includes the decomposition of dolomite and talc. The TG curve shows a sharp decrease in mass at 580 °C, and two endothermic valleys appear at 629.7 °C and 657.2 °C, which is attributed to the decomposition of dolomite (Equation (1)). Weight loss is 3.30% from 740 to 1000 °C, with endothermic valleys at 770.2 °C and 787.2 °C due to re-decomposition of dolomite (Equation (2)) and the endothermic valley at 846.7 °C caused by dihydroxylation. In addition, there is an endothermic valley at 920.7 °C, and the TG curve tends to flatten, while the talc phase transitions to enstatite (Equation (3)) [32].
CaMg(CO3)2→ CaCO3 + MgO + 2CO2
CaCO3→ CaO + CO2
Mg3[Si4O10](OH)2→ 3MgSiO3 + SiO2 + H2O↑

3.2. In Situ XRD Analysis

Changes in mineral crystal structures during thermal treatment are tracked in real time via in situ XRD to identify the influence of temperature on black talc structures. Figure 2a shows the WAXRD patterns of black talc and partial enlargement of the peak at 2θ = 27–29° (Figure 2a). The d(006) values and peak positions of black talc were combined to reflect crystallographic structure changes during calcination (Figure 2b). Combined with TG–DSC and TG–MS results, Figure 2a,b distinctly reveals the evolution process of talc at 30–1000 °C: (1) dehydration: below 200 °C, the intensity of water (m/z = 18) in the MS curves is close to 0 (Figure 1b), and the adsorbed water of black talc is completely removed [31]. However, the d(006) value of the calcined sample is not reduced (Figure 2b), which means that water is absorbed on the surface of the mineral and does not enter the layer. (2) Decomposition: with temperature increasing to 550 °C, there is an obvious peak in the m/z = 44 MS curve (Figure 1b), which indicates the oxidative decomposition of organic carbon between black talc layers [33]. There is a larger d(006) value for T550 (0.315 nm) than that for raw black talc (0.313 nm) due to the CO2 caused by the decomposition of organic carbon escape, leading to the expansion and deformation of black talc structures. In addition, compared with the XRD patterns of Talc, T100, T200, T300, T400, T500, and T600, there is a slight change in T700. The peaks at 2θ = 30.62° and 2θ = 40.92° corresponding to the base reflections on (104) and (113) planes of dolomite become fainter and weaker, eventually disappearing entirely from T750 [34]. In conclusion, organic carbon decomposition separates black talc layers, and dolomite decomposes entirely below 750 °C, which is compatible with the TG and TG–MS study results. (3) Phase transition: after the calcination of pristine black talc at 800 °C, the peak corresponding to the base reflections on (006) gradually becomes weak, indicating that black talc begins to go through dihydroxylation [35]. The reflections of the enstatite structure appear in the XRD pattern of T950, indicating the mineral phase transition [36]. The XRD pattern of T1000 is utterly devoid of structural reflections of talc, suggesting a complete transformation to the enstatite phase. Ohlberg and Strickler defined the crystallinity index (CI) [37], which includes the peak intensities and background to quantify the deformation of the crystal structure [38]. The specific index is:
CI = B0I/(I0B) × 100%
where CI = crystallinity index, I0 = peak intensity for referenced sample, B0 = background intensity for referenced sample, I = peak intensity for experimental sample, and B = background intensity for experimental sample. Here, to eliminate the influence of moisture in the air on the crystallinity of the samples, T100 was used as a reference sample [39]. Below 700 °C, the crystallinity index of black talc decreases from 100% (T100) to 79.9% (T700), and T750 and T800 remain relatively constant (Figure 2c). The relative crystallinity index of black talc, in particular, drops drastically over 800 °C, from 75.8% to 51.0% at 900 °C, indicating that the dihydroxylation reaction of black talc has commenced. Noteworthily, the relative crystallinity index of T950 plummets to 27.3%, and the (006) peak in the XRD pattern almost disappears, indicating that black talc cannot maintain a complete crystal structure at 950 °C, and more amorphous SiO2 and MgO appear in the structure. Black talc then undergoes a phase transition and evolves into enstatite (Equation (3)). Existing research has reported that dihydroxylation processes in talc take place at temperatures as high as approximately 850–900 °C [40]. However, it has been observed that dihydroxylation of black talc begins at 800 °C; additionally, black talc has a lower degree of crystallization and poor thermal stability compared with conventional talc.
The full width (β) at half the maximum of the diffraction peak changes as temperature increases due to lattice deformation produced by phase transformation and oxidative breakdown of organic carbon. Scherrer established a formula (Equation (5)) for the full width at the half maximum (βd) of the diffraction peak to explain the relationship between grain size (D) and βd [41]. The strain induced in powders due to crystal imperfection and distortion was calculated using the formula (Equation (6)) [42].
β d = K λ Dcos θ
β s = 4 ε tan θ
where k is the shape factor, λ is the wavelength of the X-ray, D is the grain size, θ is the diffraction angle, and ε is the lattice deformation degree.
β cos θ = 4 ε sin θ + K λ D
Taking the Kosch diffraction intensity distribution theory as the basis, the above two equations (Equations (5) and (6)) can be superimposed into Equation (7) which is called Williamson–Hall equation [43].
Based on previous studies, the relationship between lattice deformation degree and temperature of minerals is studied. By calculating the full width (β) at the half maximum value of the diffraction peak of the crystal plane on the XRD pattern, the straight line of βcosθ~sinθ can be obtained (Figure 2d). According to Equation (7), the slope of the line in Figure 2d reflects the lattice deformation of different samples. Figure 2d,e demonstrates that the βcosθ~sinθ fitting lines of T100, T200, and T300 are almost identical straight lines with remarkably similar slopes. The slope increases with temperature, and a significant increase occurs at 800 °C, indicating that dihydroxylation of black talc has begun. The slope of T950 substantially increases, the crystallographic structure of black talc becomes exceedingly disordered, and the black talc phase transforms into the enstatite.

3.3. FTIR Spectrum

Earlier studies reported vibrational bands of talc and other clay minerals. In situ FTIR was used to characterize the variation trend in the vibrational bands of black talc during thermal treatment (Figure 3). In ideal talc, three Mg ions are linked to the hydroxyl ion symmetrically, and the O–H stretching band is related to the Mg3OH appearing at 3676 cm–1 [44]. There is a broadband at 3420 cm−1 due to an overlap in the H-O-H bond’s symmetric and asymmetric stretching vibrations in H2O. The weak band at 1440 cm−1 is caused by antisymmetric stretching of –CO3 in carbonate. The sharp band at 1017 cm−1 associated with the stretching vibration of Si-O-Si confirms the existence of a SiO4 tetrahedral in the crystal structure of black talc [40]. The peaks at 802 cm−1 and 785 cm−1 are caused by the symmetrical stretching of Si-O-Si in quartz. Absorption-associated fundamental OH vibrations have been recognized through hydrogen–deuterium substitution experiments. The band near 669 cm–1 is attributed to OH libration [45].
Dehydrogenation and structural changes can occur when minerals are heated to high temperatures, such as in rectorite dihydroxylation between 500 and 700 °C [46]. Paradoxically, thermal treatment has little influence on the OH bands of black talc below 800 °C. The FTIR spectra of the samples remained unchanged at 200 °C, with only the broadband associated with H-O-H disappearing at 3420 cm−1. At this point, the mineral is completely dehydroxylated. Meanwhile, the weak peak of T700 at 1440 cm−1 has disappeared completely, indicating the occurrence of dolomite decomposition in the mineral. The OH libration at 669 cm−1 decreases in the calcined sample T800. Furthermore, the position of O–H stretching associated with Mg3OH species shifts to the lower band, from 3676 cm−1 to 3666 cm−1. Simultaneously, the vibration bands at 1017 cm−1 attributed to the Si-O-Si also shift to the low band, from 1017 cm−1 to 1000 cm−1. These changes indicate that the structure of talc has changed after thermal treatment.
As a result of the above analysis, the crystal structure of black talc changes at 800 °C. Despite this, the cause of talc’s structural alteration is unknown. Consequently, when the temperature was above 800 °C, the structural alterations of materials, particularly changes in chemical groups, were explored in depth using FTIR analysis. The FTIR absorption spectra and the corresponding band assignments of Talc, T800, and T900 are shown in Figure 4. Compared with Talc, the intensity of peaks at 3676 and 1017 cm−1 decreases until they disappear. Simultaneously, several small infrared absorption peaks appear at 800–900 cm−1, caused by dihydroxylation of black talc. Moreover, dihydroxylation causes the vibration peak of OH- at 669 cm−1 to weaken and fragment into multiple minor peaks. Therefore, the FTIR test results of black talc heating indicate that black talc begins to go through dihydroxylation and crystal decomposition at 800 °C as well.

3.4. Physical Property Measurements

According to the IUPAC classification, there is a slight H3 hysteresis loop in Figure 5a, and the shape of the N2 adsorption/desorption isotherm indicates that the black talc adsorption type is a type II adsorption branch. The slotted holes formed by stacking flake particles are common in black talc. When P/P0 is at a lower stage, the adsorption isotherm increases with an increase in P/P0, and the black talc pore wall surface is covered with a monolayer of nitrogen molecules in a single layer. The multilayer adsorption of nitrogen molecules contributes to the adsorption isotherm rising sharply from P/P0 = 0.9, indicating that the mesopores in the samples have a uniform pore size distribution and are well ordered. Moreover, the pore size distribution curves show small mesopores with a 3–4.5 nm pore size in black talc. After thermal treatment, the adsorption capacity and pore size of black talc do not change significantly below 700 °C, and the pore size distribution of T700 is around 4.0 nm. Although the organic carbon decomposes between the mineral layers at this time, it does not change the specific surface area of the mineral significantly due to the small amount involved. However, due to the dihydroxylation of minerals, the pore size and adsorption volume of the sample show a certain degree of reduction at 800 °C. Interestingly, even at 1000 °C, T1000 still has adsorption capacity. Its pore size distribution curve has a clear peak at 4.0 nm, suggesting that talc can still maintain a certain pore structure at high temperatures.
In addition, the fractal concept describes the surface roughness of mineral structures. Furthermore, the fractal dimension D can be derived from adsorption measurements, calculated via the following equation [47].
N N m RTln P 0 P 3 D / 3
N N m RTln P 0 P 3 D
where N/Nm represents the surface fractional coverage, and P and P0 are, respectively, the equilibrium and saturation pressures of the adsorbate. From the isotherm, one can generate a plot of ln(N/Nm) vs. ln[ln(P0/P)] (Figure 5c). The exponents in Equations (8) and (9) can be obtained from the slope S of this plot. Usually, 2 ≤ D < 3, and a higher D value suggests a more wiggle- and space-filling surface. Thus, Equation (8) predicts that we should have −1/3 ≤ S < 0, but Equation (9) says that −1 ≤ S < 0. Table 2 shows that the fractal constant of minerals decreases with the increase in temperature, indicating that the surface of mineral structure becomes smoother.
Previous studies have shown that crystal lattice distortion and chemical bond fracture of clay minerals increased the specific surface area and surface defects [48,49], leading to an increase in reactivity [50,51]. When the temperature exceeds 800 °C, the particle size of black talc increases from 21.94 μm (Talc) to 28.17 μm (T800) due to dihydroxylation (Figure 6a). Meanwhile, a considerable amount of amorphous SiO2 and MgO appears (Figure 6b), and mineral activity significantly improves. Combined with the analysis results of in situ XRD, the relative crystallinity index of T950 is 27.3%. The particle size of T1000 is 32.78 μm, and the amorphous silica content is very high. The results of the above investigation demonstrate that thermal treatment can cause structural collapse and activity improvement of black talc.

3.5. Surface Zeta Potential

Calcination can affect the surface potential of black talc, and its change trend can be measured via Zeta potential. The electrokinetic phenomena of different black talc calcination samples were investigated in this paper, which measured the Zeta potential of black talc samples in different pH suspensions. The results showed that the Zeta potential of samples remained stable in different pH solutions, indicating that the hydroxyl deprotonation ability of black talc surface was weak. Among them, T800 has less negative surface potential (Figure 7a). When pH = 2, the surface potential of black talc calcined at different temperatures changes little (Figure 7b). The surface potential of T800 is half that of natural talc, which is associated with the dihydroxylation of black talc. Moreover, the Zeta potential of sample T800 basically did not change with the change of pH, indicating that the -OH removal also reduced the ability of mineral surface deprotonation.

3.6. Morphological Variation of Black Talc upon Thermal Treatment

Obviously, color change is the most obvious change that black talc undergoes during calcination. With an increase in temperature, the whiteness of minerals increases significantly (Figure 8). Uneven layered structures can be observed at the edges of black talc particles via scanning electron microscopy (SEM, Figure 9). The crystal of black talc is an irregular and small flake, and the radial size of the flake is tens to hundreds of nanometers. Compared with natural black talc, calcined black talc layers become fluffier (Figure 9c,d). Significantly, black talc can still maintain a good lamellar structure at high temperatures (Figure 9e,f), indicating that black talc has good thermal stability. In addition, many fine particles appear on the mineral surface during heat treatment.
Pristine black talc crystal particles are composed of lamellar layers with small diameters, thin thickness, and poor crystallinity (Figure 10). Noticeably, black talc maintains its layered structure during thermal treatment. In addition, T900 and T1000 crystals are mostly round and irregular in shape. Selected area electron diffraction (SAED) images showed a good crystal structure of samples calcined at temperatures below 700 °C (Figure 10a–d). Significant deterioration of the mineral crystal structure occurs at 900 °C (Figure 10e), which is due to the destruction of the crystal structure caused by dihydroxylation. Thus, TEM and SEAD images of calcined samples at different temperatures further confirm the increase in the amorphous degree of black talc during thermal treatment. Overall, calcined at a temperature range of 30 to 1000 °C, pristine black talc will undergo four successive stages (Figure 11): (1) 30–165 °C, dehydration; (2) 165–580 °C, organic carbon decomposition; (3) 800–900 °C, dihydroxylation; and (4) 900–1000 °C, phase transitions.

4. Conclusions

The evolution of the crystal structure, physicochemical properties, and morphology of black talc during thermal treatment were systematically studied. The first notable structural change in black talc is the widening layer spacing produced by CO2 escaping from organic carbon decomposition. Dehydration does not change the structure of black talc because water is adsorbed on the surface of the ore in small amounts. Dihydroxylation of black talc begins at 800 °C, and the temperature is lower than that of conventional talc. At this stage, the specific surface area and pore size of the mineral decrease slightly but more than they do in original black talc, and the layered structure can still be maintained. Black talc then goes through phase transitions and becomes enstatite, and the reflections associated with the enstatite structure emerge in the XRD pattern of T950. Meanwhile, calcined minerals have a larger grain size and higher amorphous SiO2 and MgO content. In addition, the surface potential of black talc also changed during thermal treatment: T800 is half that of natural talc. Overall, thermal treatment improves the surface activity and whiteness of black talc. Our results systematically confirm the evolution of black talc upon thermal treatment, providing a theoretical basis for the preparation of functional composites from black talc. Different nanoparticles can be assembled on the surface of calcined black talc, with the aim to realize the functionalization of black talc. Functionalized modified black talc can be applied to many high-tech fields, such as biology, the environment, and catalysis, thus greatly improving the application value of black talc.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, H.Y. and Y.M.; methodology, Y.M. and W.X.; validation, Y.M. and H.Y.; formal analysis, Y.M.; investigation, Y.M.; resources, Y.M. and H.Y.; data curation, Y.M. and H.W.; writing—original draft preparation, Y.M.; writing—review and editing, Y.M., S.M.T. and H.Y.; supervision, H.Y.; project administration, H.Y.; funding acquisition, H.Y. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (51974367), the National Science Fund for Distinguished Young Scholars (51225403), the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities, China University of Geosciences (Wuhan), and Hunan Provincial Innovation Foundation for Postgraduates (CX2017B057).

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. (a) TG–DSC curves, (b) m/z = 18, 44 MS curves, and (c) MS desorption yields of pristine black talc.
Figure 1. (a) TG–DSC curves, (b) m/z = 18, 44 MS curves, and (c) MS desorption yields of pristine black talc.
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Figure 2. (a) In situ XRD patterns, (b) corresponding d(006) values and peak positions, (c) relative crystallinity, (d) βcosθ~sinθ curves, and (e) lattice deformation degree of black talc upon calcination.
Figure 2. (a) In situ XRD patterns, (b) corresponding d(006) values and peak positions, (c) relative crystallinity, (d) βcosθ~sinθ curves, and (e) lattice deformation degree of black talc upon calcination.
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Figure 3. In situ FTIR spectra of black talc calcined at different temperatures and peaks of Talc and T800 near 1017 cm−1 and 3674 cm−1.
Figure 3. In situ FTIR spectra of black talc calcined at different temperatures and peaks of Talc and T800 near 1017 cm−1 and 3674 cm−1.
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Figure 4. FTIR spectra of Talc, T800, and T900 from (a) 4000 to 400 cm−1, (b) 1250 to 600 cm−1.
Figure 4. FTIR spectra of Talc, T800, and T900 from (a) 4000 to 400 cm−1, (b) 1250 to 600 cm−1.
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Figure 5. (a) N2 adsorption/desorption isotherm curves; (b) BJH pore size distribution curves of pristine black talc and calcined samples at different temperatures; (c) A log-log plot of N/Nm vs. ln P/P0 showing the linear range where fractal behavior is observed.
Figure 5. (a) N2 adsorption/desorption isotherm curves; (b) BJH pore size distribution curves of pristine black talc and calcined samples at different temperatures; (c) A log-log plot of N/Nm vs. ln P/P0 showing the linear range where fractal behavior is observed.
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Figure 6. (a) particle size distribution of Talc, T800, and T1000; (b) relationship between the content of amorphous SiO2 and MgO and the calcination temperature of black talc.
Figure 6. (a) particle size distribution of Talc, T800, and T1000; (b) relationship between the content of amorphous SiO2 and MgO and the calcination temperature of black talc.
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Figure 7. Zeta potential of pristine black talc and calcined samples at (a) different pH values, (b) pH = 2.
Figure 7. Zeta potential of pristine black talc and calcined samples at (a) different pH values, (b) pH = 2.
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Figure 8. Whiteness change of black talc during heat treatment.
Figure 8. Whiteness change of black talc during heat treatment.
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Figure 9. SEM images of (a) Talc, (b) T300, (c) T500, (d) T700, (e) T900, and (f) T1000; the mapping of (g) Talc and (h) T1000 samples.
Figure 9. SEM images of (a) Talc, (b) T300, (c) T500, (d) T700, (e) T900, and (f) T1000; the mapping of (g) Talc and (h) T1000 samples.
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Figure 10. TEM images of (a) Talc, (b) T300, (c) T500, (d) T700, (e) T900, and (f) T1000.
Figure 10. TEM images of (a) Talc, (b) T300, (c) T500, (d) T700, (e) T900, and (f) T1000.
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Figure 11. Schematic diagram of black talc evolution during thermal treatment.
Figure 11. Schematic diagram of black talc evolution during thermal treatment.
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Table 1. Chemical composition of pristine black talc (mass fraction, %).
Table 1. Chemical composition of pristine black talc (mass fraction, %).
ComponentSiO2MgOCaOFP2O5Al2O3Na2O
wt%65.0330.6692.7160.6970.2350.1750.156
ComponentFe2O3SO3ZnOK2OMnOTiO2
wt%0.1500.0680.0380.0250.0220.020
Table 2. Surface fractal dimensions of samples obtained using fractal FHH isotherm equations.
Table 2. Surface fractal dimensions of samples obtained using fractal FHH isotherm equations.
SamplesSurface Area (m2/g)SlopeD from Equation (8)D from Equation (9)
Talc18.8−0.3252.032.68
T30017.7−0.3332.002.67
T40017.6−0.3601.922.64
T50018.5−0.3681.902.63
T60017.9−0.3971.812.60
T70017.9−0.4301.712.57
T80015.0−0.4551.632.54
T90011.2−0.4741.582.53
T10005.3−0.5501.352.45
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Meng, Y.; Xie, W.; Wu, H.; Tariq, S.M.; Yang, H. Evolution of Black Talc upon Thermal Treatment. Minerals 2022, 12, 155. https://doi.org/10.3390/min12020155

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Meng Y, Xie W, Wu H, Tariq SM, Yang H. Evolution of Black Talc upon Thermal Treatment. Minerals. 2022; 12(2):155. https://doi.org/10.3390/min12020155

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Meng, Yuhang, Weimin Xie, Haiyan Wu, Sarwar Muhammad Tariq, and Huaming Yang. 2022. "Evolution of Black Talc upon Thermal Treatment" Minerals 12, no. 2: 155. https://doi.org/10.3390/min12020155

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