Open Journal of Civil Engineering
Vol. 3  No. 2A (2013) , Article ID: 33209 , 8 pages DOI:10.4236/ojce.2013.32A006

Geotechnical, Mineralogical and Chemical Characterization of the Missole II Clayey Materials of Douala Sub-Basin (Cameroon) for Construction Materials

Elisabeth Olivia Logmo1, Gilbert François Ngon Ngon1*, Williams Samba1, Michel Bertrand Mbog2, Jacques Etame1

1Laboratory of Subsurface, Department of Earth Sciences, Faculty of Science, University of Douala, Douala, Cameroon

2Laboratory of Environmental Geology, Department of Earth Sciences, Faculty of Science, University of Dschang, Dschang, Cameroon

Email: *gngonngon@yahoo.fr

Copyright © 2013 Elisabeth Olivia Logmo et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Received May 1, 2013; revised June 3, 2013; accepted June 11, 2013

Keywords: Cameroon; Construction Materials; Geotechnical Tests; Mineralogical and Chemical Analyses; Missole II

ABSTRACT

Geotechnical tests conducted on clayey materials of Missole II, Douala sub-basin of Cameroon showed that these materials present: fines particles (55 to 78 wt.%), sand (22 to 44 wt.%), and plasticity index of 13.8 to 21.6%. The X-ray diffraction (XRD) and the chemical analysis revealed a kaolinite amount of 46 to 56 wt.%, 19 to 27 wt.% of illite, 12 to 19 wt.% of quartz, 3 to 5 wt.% of goethite, 2 to 5 wt.% of hematite, 1.5 to 5 wt.% of anatase, 2 to 3 wt.% of feldspar-K with 52.87 to 63.11 wt.% of SiO2, 18.08 to 24.31 wt.% of Al2O3, 3.28 to 11.45 wt.% of Fe2O3 and a small content of bases (<2 wt.%). The results of geotechnical tests combined to those of the XRD and the chemical analysis showed that the Missole II clayey materials are suitable for the manufacture of bricks, tiles and sandstones.

1. Introduction

Clay-rich materials are intensively used in the manufacturing of ceramics and as construction materials. However, the clayey deposit types are known as sedimentary, alluvial, and residual. A good knowledge of their occurrences, quantity and properties is required for their efficient exploitation.

In the Douala sedimentary sub-basin (South-Cameroon, Central Africa), some studies are done concerning the stratigraphic and tectonic evolution including [1-13]. Others studies are done to set up industrial units for manufacturing construction materials and ceramics [14] or concerning the mineralogical and chemical or thermal characteristics of the clay sediments [15-21].

In the Missole II area (Douala sub-basin), a geological study is carried out to locate and describe the clayey material outcrops and their provenance [22-24]. Also, some authors showed the possibility to obtain good ceramic building materials by mixing silica, feldspars, and kaolinitic and illitic clay of the Missole II area [25]. However, despite the preliminary works done on the field to describe clayey materials and to determine their sedimentation evolution, no further physical, mineralogical and chemical study is carried out to show their characteristics in order to their applications.

To that effect, the objective of this study is to associate the geotechnical characteristic to the mineralogical and chemical compositions of the clay occurrences of the Missole II deposit in order to evaluate its suitability for manufacturing of construction materials and ceramics.

2. Geographic and Geological Setting

Missole II is located on the Eastern part of the Douala sub-basin (Cameroon, Central Africa) between latitude 3˚59' - 3˚54'N and longitude 9˚54' - 9˚58'E. It is located within a humid equatorial climatic zone. Annual rainfall ranges between 3000 and 5000 mm, and the annual average temperature is 26˚C. The vegetation is a dense rainforest transformed by human activities [26]. The geomorphology of the study area is a domain of the Cameroon coastal plain with low altitudes (40 - 120 m). The Missole II area shows hills with flat and sharp summits and is deeply dissected by V and U shaped valleys of MBongo, Bongougou, Missolo and Bongo the main rivers of the area. According to the geological map of SNH/UD report [12], the relative age of the Missole II sediments is Paleocene-Eocene corresponding to the N’Kapa Formation Figure 1.

The lithostratigraphy of Douala sub-basin is made of seven major Formations related to its geodynamic and sedimentary evolution [10-12]. 1) The synrift period represented by the Mundeck Formation (Aptian-Cenomanian) is discordant onto the Precambrian basement and consists of continental and fluvio-deltaic deposits, i.e., clays, coarse-grained sandstones, conglomerates. The postrift sequence includes; 2) the Logbadjeck Formation (Cenomanian-Campanian), discordant onto the Mundeck Formation and composed of micro conglomerates, sand, sandstone, limestone, and clay; 3) the Logbaba Formation (Maastrichtian), mainly composed of sandstone, sand and fossiliferous clay; 4) the N’kapa Formation (Paleocene-Eocene), rich in marl and clay with lenses of sand and fine to coarse-grained crumbly sandstone; 5) the Souellaba Formation (Oligocene) lying unconformably on N’kapa deposits and characterized by marl deposits with some interstratified lenses and sand channels; 6) the Matanda Formation (Miocene), dominated by deltaic facies interstratified with volcanoclasties layers; and 7) the Wouri Formation (Plio-Pleistocene) which consists of gravelly and sandy deposits with a clayey or kaolinic matrix.

3. Raw Materials and Experimental Methods

The raw material used in this study comes from four representative clayey profiles of the Missole II area with three profiles of the interfluves along the Douala-Edéa road and one from the pit drilling on the lower slope of the valley. A geological survey shows different types of sediments with micro conglomerates, sandstones, fragments of ferruginous duricrusts and clays. Clayey layers are overlain upwards by sandstones or micro conglomerates, ferruginous duricrusts and sandy-clays, and occupy the lower part of the profiles. Four clayey facies identified with different mixed textures like sandy-clay, clayey-

Figure 1. Geological sketch map of Cameroonian coastal basins (SNH/UD, 2005).

silt and silty-clay are mainly of sedimentary origin [23, 24]. The average thickness of the exploitable layers is 2.5 m. Two clayey samples collected from clay layer of each representative profile for mineralogical and chemical data are mixed to obtain average sample which served to realize the geotechnical analyses. A sufficient quantity of the single mixture of 2 to 3 kg of sediments is collected from a meter-long groove. The sample is analyzed for physical, mineralogy and chemistry.

The particle size distribution has been achieved in two steps: 1) a conventional sieving for the 63 to 2000 µm fractions; 2) using a sedigraph 5000 in automatic procedure for clay and silt fractions. The liquid limit is measured by the method of the dish of Casagrande (wL) and the plastic limit by the method of the roller (wP). The blue methylene value (Vb) is determined on the total sample.

One hundred grams of each homogenized sample is grounded to −200 mesh (0.075 mm) in an agate mortar for chemical and XRD mineralogical study. Mineral identification is performed using a Setsys 2400 apparatus from SETARAM 85 equipped with a DSC 1500 heat system with Pt crucibles for thermal analysis, from room temperature up to 1100˚C using a rate treatment of 10˚C∙min−1 and alumina heat treated at 1500˚C serving as reference material. For XRD, a Brünker diffractometer D8 ADVANCE with a copper source (λ = 1.5489 Å) is used on bulk and fine (<2 µm) samples, working under 40 kV and 40 mA. The exposure time for qualitative analysis is 2 h. Mineralogical phases are identified (JCPDS, 1998). Semi-quantitative analysis is performed [27]. For microscopic analysis, clay samples are examined with a scanning electron microscope (SEM) (Cambridge stereos can 200) coupled with an energy dispersive spectra microprobe (EDS). Homogenized powder of sediment sample is chemically analyzed for major and trace elements by ICP-AES after dissolution using acid digestion procedure with HF, HNO3, and HClO4. Classification of the clayey materials is performed by Autret (1983) method [28,29]. This method differentiates lateritic materials to non lateritic materials. It is based on the ratio S/R where, S is the ratio between SiO2 concentration and the molar mass and R the ratio between Al2O3 plus Fe2O3 concentrations and their molar mass. In fact, for true lateritic material S/R is less than 1.33, for lateritic rocks it is 1.33 to 2, and for clay material it is more than 2.

4. Results

4.1. Geotechnical Characteristics

The particle size distribution of the raw basic materials shows that the samples consist of 23 to 45 wt.% of sand, 17 to 33 wt.% of silts and 34 to 45 wt.% of clayey fractions. The geotechnical characteristics of the samples are reported in Table 1. These results are permitted to deduce that the class of these samples is in fine fractions [30]. The plasticity index (13.8% to 21.6%) is varied between 12 and 25, and shows that these materials are averagely plastic [31]. This plasticity is presumably a consequence of the average content of clayey minerals and quartz. The methylene blue value (0.4 to 0.91 g/100g) of the concerned materials, which is corroborated with the plasticity index, may suggest the absence of swelling clay minerals.

4.2. Mineralogical Composition

4.2.1. DTA analysis

Figure 2 represents the DTA analysis curves obtained for the raw materials M2P3 and M2A3 at room temperature up to 1100˚C using a rate treatment of 10˚C∙min−1. Differential scanning calorimetric (DSC) observed on these DTA analysis curves shows endothermic pheno-

Table 1. Geotechnical characteristics of the samples.

Figure 2. DTA curves of M2A3 and M2P3 materials for a heating rate of 10˚C/min.

menon towards 110˚C associated to the physisorbed water and another endothermic phenomenon towards 320˚C due to the dehydroxylation of goethite. A specific endothermic transformation at 400˚C - 600˚C is due to the loss of structural hydroxyl groups of the kaolinite and an exothermic peak at 900˚C - 1000˚C due to the structural reorganization of the metakaolinite [32,33].

4.2.2. X-Ray Diffraction

The diffractograms of powder of the bulk samples ground until <80 µm revealed that clayey materials are kaolinitic and illitic and have permitted the detection of the following mineral phases: kaolinite, quartz, illite, goethite, hematite and accessory feldspar-K and anatase [24]. These mineral phases were usually present in theclayey materials of the Douala sub-basin [16,17,21].

The diffractograms of <2 µm fraction of Figure 3 also indicated the presence of the same mineral phases observed in the total samples with kaolinite, illite, quartz, goethite, hematite and accessory feldspar-K and anatase. Comparison of the minerals detected, these mineral phases are present in the fraction of the smaller and thicker granulometry.

The Table 2 gives the semi-quantitative mineralogical

(a)(b)(c)(d)

Figure 3. XRD patterns of <2 µm clay samples from Missolle II area of (a), (b), (c) and (d) profiles. A: Anatase; G: Goethite; He: Hematite; Il: Illite; K: Kaolinite; Q: Quartz; F: K-feldspar.

Table 2. Semi-quantitative mineralogical composition of the samples (wt.%).

composition of the mineral phases of the samples. It reported an important proportion of kaolinite (46 to 56 wt.%), appreciable amounts of illite (19 to 27 wt.%) and quartz (12 to 19 wt.%), which are in relation with the value of the plasticity index (13.8 to 21.6%) and the methylene blue value (0.8 to 1.6 g/100g). The amounts of the other mineral phases are respectively goethite (3 to 5 wt.%), hematite (2 to 5 wt.%), anatase (1.5 to 5 wt.%) and feldspar-K (2 to 3 wt.%).

4.2.3. Microscopic Analysis

Figure 4 shows a SEM observation performed on samples of grey and mottled, with sandy-clay, silty-clay and clayey-silt texture. In clayey materials, piles of disordered kaolinites are observed with various sizes and irregular forms, which indicated that kaolinites of sedimentary clayey material of the Missole II area are poorly crystallized [34].

4.3. Chemical Composition

The chemical composition of the samples is given on Table 3. The results of the chemical analysis shows the presence of important amounts of SiO2 (52.87 to 63.11 wt.%), associated with an appreciable amounts of Al2O3 (18.08 to 24.31 wt.%) and Fe2O3 (3.28 to 11.45 wt.%) and a small content of bases (<2 wt.%, CaO + MgO +

Na2O + K2O).

These results show that quartz, alumino-silicates com-

M2P3M2A3

Figure 4. SEM images of M2P3 and M2A3 clayey materials of Missole II.

Table 3. Chemical composition of the sample.

pounds and iron minerals are predominate in the samples. The weak content of oxide calcium or potassium has proven that the calcitic and potassic minerals like calcite or feldspar are absent or are in a weak proportion. With S/R more than 2, the analyzed samples are clays [28].

5. Discussion

The particle size in this study revealed texture classes: silty-clay, clayey-silt and sandy-clay described in many deposits of the Douala sub-basin [17,21]. These classes characterized very sticky and plastic materials in accordance with some field characteristics such as smoothness, stickiness and plasticity [35]. Indeed, the fine particles and especially the very fine clay minerals determine the plasticity of an earthly material [32]. The plasticity index (13.8% to 21.6%) of the above clayey samples is supported by the high amounts of fine particles (silt + clay) and fine clay minerals. The amount of clay fraction is used to determine the manufactured products as is shown in Table 4 [36]. However, particle size and plasticity index are amongst the main geotechnical characteristics used to determine a convenient choice of construction material. In this case, taking into account of the amounts of sand (22 to 44 wt.%), fine particles notably the clay fractions (34 to 45 wt.%), and plasticity index, the Missole II clayey materials are convenient to the manufacturing of bricks, tiles and sandstones [37-39].

The mineralogical composition and geotechnical characteristics of a construction material must be known simultaneously in order to make a suitable choice for this raw basic material. It is well known that clay minerals have detrimental effects on the geotechnical properties; since some swelling clay minerals such as smectites absorb more water than the other (e.g. kaolinite). The volumetric shrinkage which increases with swelling clay minerals such as smectites constitutes an important parameter to take into account for civil public engineering [29,40]. The amount of clay minerals and especially swelling clay minerals contribute to the increasing of volumetric shrinkage and the swelling phenomena. Some authors joined the swelling potential and/or volumetric shrinkage to two parameters [36]. A first ordering is based on the plasticity index and the percentage of fine clayey

Table 4. Relation between particles size and type of ceramic product to realize (after Cere and Mazel, 1993).

fraction (<2 µm size). A second method proposes to use the liquid limit and the percentage of fine particles which size is less than 74 µm [41]. In this case, the studied materials, which have plasticity index between 12% and 25%, 34 and 45 wt.% of clayey fraction (<2 µm size), 54 and 78 wt% of fine fraction (<80 µm size) and liquid limit between 32% and 47% are very low to moderate swelling materials as is indicated in Table 5. This observation is corroborated with the mineralogical composition which shows that fine fraction is mainly composed of kaolinite and few illites, as well as smectites are absent.

The geotechnical and mechanical characteristics of clayey materials are essentially depending on their chemical and mineralogical compositions as well as of the minerals distribution [37,39]. In this study, the clayey samples mainly constituted of poorly crystallized kaolinite (46 to 56 wt.%), which is in agreement with the loss on ignition (12% to 17%), illite (19 to 27 wt.%) and quartz (12 to 19 wt.%), are adequate for the composition of ceramic pastry [42] and for the manufacturing of bricks and tiles [14,37]. Also, clayey materials are siliceous (SiO2 > 60 wt.%), with their alumina (Al2O3) content less than 35 wt.% and appreciable amount of iron (<10 wt.% with the exception of EC2 sample) is suitable for the manufacturing of tiles and bricks [41]. However, the weakest amounts of bases <2 wt.% (oxides of calcium, magnesium, sodium and potassium) which are the smelting or cimentitious compound corroborated with the flexural strength less than 10 MPa of the Missole II clayey material [25].

6. Conclusions

The following conclusions can be drawn out from the present work:

1) The geotechnical, mineralogical and chemical results show that the clayey materials of the Missole II, Douala sub-basin of Cameroon are mainly constituted of sand (23 to 45 wt.%), silts (17 to 33 wt.%) and clays (34 to 45 wt.%) with plasticity index of 13.8% to 21.6%.

2) Kaolinite, illite and quartz are the main minerals.

3) Clayey materials are also siliceous and aluminous, and have appreciable amount of iron in most clayey

Table 5. Swelling potential of soils according to their plasticity index, liquid limit and respectively their <2 and <74 µm fractions.

samples (Fe2O3 less than 10 wt%).

4) Based on the obtained geotechnical, mineralogical and chemical results, and the literature data, the studied materials are suitable for the manufacturing of bricks, tiles and sandstones.

5) These clayey materials present poor mechanical characteristics (feeble flexural strength and great fragility) partly linked to the chemical and mineralogical nature fundamentally complex of natural clays.

7. Acknowledgements

The authors acknowledge the financial support of the University of Douala and the geochemical analysis of Geo Labs (Geoscience Laboratories) in Canada. Many thanks are also given to Professor David Smith, Director of the GEMH laboratory at ENSCI and Professor Gisèle Lecomte of Centre Européen de la Céramique, Limoges, France, and to all of their collaborators.

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NOTES

*Corresponding author.