The Mössbauer Spectrum of Illite

Abstract
Eight illites were studied by Mössbauer spectroscopy at room temperature and 4.2 K. On the basis of their Fe contents, these illites can be divided into an Fe-rich (>5 wt% Fe) and an Fe-poor (3+ doublets, escaped detection at room temperature. Structural Fe3+ had a temperature-independent quadrupole splitting that was lower for the Fe-rich illites (0.59 mm/s) than that of the Fe-poor illites (0.73 mm/s). The Fe2+ quadrupole splittings were higher at 4.2 K than at room temperature, but the Fe-rich illites again had lower Fe2+ quadrupole splittings both at room temperature (2.69 vs. 2.88 mm/s) and at 4.2 K (2.96 mm/s vs. 3.08 mm/s). Distinction of Fe sites in the illites with cis- and trans-OH coordination was not possible. The presence of tetrahedral Fe3+ was observed only in the most Fe-rich sample (8.4 wt% Fe).