Quizzes & Puzzles2 mins ago
chemical water?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Clay minerals also consist of hydrated silicates (usually alumo-silicates) where water is chemically bonded within the crystal lattice. It takes a considerably higher temperature than 100 �C for thermal decomposition of the mineral to occur.
An anology is if you ever heated (blue) copper sulphate back in your school chemistry lessons. You could drive off the water of crystallisation to form the white, anhydrous copper sulphate, but it involved heating it over a very hot bunsen flame for several minutes.
Although it's not exactly the same process, (as the reaction in the copper sulphate case is easily reversed by adding water) - but you get the idea, in that it's not just a case of the clay 'being wet', but that the water is chemically bonded within the clay minerals.