Fabien Hubert
University of Poitiers
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Featured researches published by Fabien Hubert.
American Mineralogist | 2012
Fabien Hubert; Laurent Caner; Alain Meunier; Eric Ferrage
Abstract A specific methodology was developed to refine the complex clay mineralogy commonly encountered in soil environments. The soil examined was a Cambisol developed into a ferralitic paleosol. The sample was split into four sub-fractions of different particle sizes (<0.05, 0.05-0.1, 0.1-0.2, and 0.2-2 μm), and their respective mass contributions to the overall <2 μm clay fraction were determined. For each sub-fraction, X-ray diffraction (XRD) patterns were modeled using a trial-and-error approach based on the direct comparison of experimental and calculated profiles. Quantitative information derived from the fitting procedure for the different sub-fractions allowed for the determination of the complex mineralogy of the <2 μm clay fraction through the identification and quantification of eight clay phases. The results show that the finest and most reactive clay fraction (<0.05 μm) was totally hidden in the XRD pattern of the <2 μm fraction, the fraction commonly considered in soil mineralogical analyses. Similarly, this procedure revealed the presence of illite-smectite-chlorite and kaolinite-illite mixed-layer minerals seldom described in soil literature using classical methods. The use of this methodology improved our understanding of the pedogenesis of this soil through the identification and quantification of clay phases structural properties. The analysis of the evolution of structural parameters with particle size allowed for the detection of local modifications in the interlayer composition of expandable and hydroxy-interlayered vermiculite layers. Following this approach, key information can be derived to determine subtle changes in clay mineralogical composition that are related to microorganism and/or plant activity.
Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2015
Liva Dzene; Emmanuel Tertre; Fabien Hubert; Eric Ferrage
Three particle size fractions of sodium-saturated vermiculite (10-20, 1-2 and 0.1-0.2 μm), differing only in their ratios of external-to-total sorption sites, were used to probe the nature of the sites involved in desorption of cesium ions. The sorption was investigated for initial aqueous concentrations of cesium ranging from 5.6×10(-4) to 1.3×10(-2) mol/L, and the cesium desorption was probed by exchange with ammonium ions. The results showed that (1) the amounts of desorbed cesium were strongly dependent on the particle size for a given initial aqueous cesium concentration and (2) the amounts of desorbed cations (Na(+) and Cs(+)) strongly decreased with increasing initial cesium aqueous concentration, irrespective of the particle size investigated. Quantitative analysis of these results suggested that cesium ions sorbed on external (edge+basal) sorption sites can be desorbed by ammonium ions. As a contrast, most of cesium ions sorbed on interlayer sites remain fixed due to the collapse of the structure under aqueous conditions. This study provides important information, such as the nature of the sites involved in the exchange process, when the thermodynamic formalism is considered to describe the ion-exchange process involving cesium and high-charge swelling clay minerals in polluted soil environments.
Clays and Clay Minerals | 2013
Fabien Hubert; Isabelle Bihannic; Dimitri Prêt; Emmanuel Tertre; Benoit Nauleau; Manuel Pelletier; Bruno Demé; Eric Ferrage
The present study investigated the anisotropy in the orientation of particles in synthetic swelling clay media prepared from the sedimentation of particle-sized fractions of vermiculite. The different size fractions (>0.1, 0.1–0.2, 1–2, and 10–20 μm) were chosen because they represent the wide range of particle sizes of swelling clay minerals encountered in natural environments. Small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) and neutron diffraction measurements allowed the characteristic scattering/diffraction features to be derived and the quantitative information about the particle orientation distributions along two directions with respect to the sedimentation plane to be extracted. The results obtained confirmed that the increase in particle size was associated with the development of a random orientation for the particles, whereas the hydration state had a negligible impact on the organization of the porous media. For finer vermiculite particles, the rocking curves demonstrated an anisotropy of the systems that is similar to those reported previously on natural montmorillonite minerals. This result suggests that the location of the layer charge has little or no impact on the anisotropy features of particle orientation. For the coarsest fraction (10–20 μm), quantitative information about the particle orientation revealed that the relative proportion of the isotropic contribution represents up to 85% of the material. The anisotropy in the 2D SANS patterns revealed a pore-network anisotropy that was consistent with the particle size.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Liva Dzene; Eric Ferrage; Jean-Christophe Viennet; Emmanuel Tertre; Fabien Hubert
Radioactive caesium pollution resulting from Fukushima Dai-ichi and Chernobyl nuclear plant accidents involves strong interactions between Cs+ and clays, especially vermiculite-type minerals. In acidic soil environments, such as in Fukushima area, vermiculite is subjected to weathering processes, resulting in aluminization. The crystal structure of aluminized clays and its implications for Cs+ mobility in soils remain poorly understood due to the mixture of these minerals with other clays and organic matter. We performed acidic weathering of a vermiculite to mimic the aluminization process in soils. Combination of structure analysis and Cs+ extractability measurements show that the increase of aluminization is accompanied by an increase in Cs+ mobility. Crystal structure model for aluminized vermiculite is based on the interstratification of unaltered vermiculite layers and aluminized layers within the same particle. Cs+ in vermiculite layers is poorly mobile, while the extractability of Cs+ is greatly enhanced in aluminized layers. The overall reactivity of the weathered clay (cation exchange capacity, Cs+ mobility) is then governed by the relative abundance of the two types of layers. The proposed layer model for aluminized vermiculite with two coexisting populations of caesium is of prime importance for predicting the fate of caesium in contaminated soil environments.
Langmuir | 2016
Benoit Carrier; Matthieu Vandamme; Roland J.-M. Pellenq; Michel Bornert; Eric Ferrage; Fabien Hubert; Henri Van Damme
We characterized experimentally the elastic and creep properties of thin self-standing clay films, and how their mechanical properties evolved with relative humidity and water content. The films were made of clay montmorillonite SWy-2, obtained by evaporation of a clay suspension. Three types of films were manufactured, which differed by their interlayer cation: sodium, calcium, or a mixture of sodium with calcium. The orientational order of the films was characterized by X-ray diffractometry. The films were mechanically solicited in tension, the resulting strains being measured by digital image correlation. We measured the Youngs modulus and the creep over a variety of relative humidities, on a full cycle of adsorption-desorption for what concerns the Youngs modulus. Increasing relative humidity made the films less stiff and made them creep more. Both the elastic and creep properties depended significantly on the interlayer cation. For the Youngs modulus, this dependence must originate from a scale greater than the scale of the clay layer. Also, hysteresis disappeared when plotting the Youngs modulus versus water content instead of relative humidity. Independent of interlayer cation and of relative humidity greater than 60%, after a transient period, the creep of the films was always a logarithmic function of time. The experimental data gathered on these mesoscale systems can be of value for modelers who aim at predicting the mechanical behavior of clay-based materials (e.g., shales) at the engineering macroscopic scale from the one at the atomistic scale, for them to validate the first steps of their upscaling scheme. They provide also valuable reference data for bioinspired clay-based hybrid materials.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2018
Emmanuel Tertre; Sébastien Savoye; Fabien Hubert; Dimitri Prêt; Thomas Dabat; Eric Ferrage
Prediction of water and solute migration in natural clay-based materials requires a detailed understanding of the roles played by different porosity types (around or inside clay particles) on the overall transfer process. For smectite, a reference material for the design of migration models, this discrimination is complex because of osmotic swelling of the structure under water-saturated conditions. Diffusion experiments with a water tracer (HDO) were conducted on 0.1-0.2, 1-2, and 10-20 μm size fractions of Na-vermiculite, a swelling clay mineral with no osmotic swelling. Results obtained for the two finest fractions suggest that osmotic swelling and the associated impact on pore structure are responsible for the low De values reported in the literature for smectite compared to those of vermiculite. When considering only interparticle porosity, De values for vermiculite are similar to those reported for nonporous grains (Na-kaolinite and Na-illite). This indicates that interparticle porosity has a primary effect on the overall water diffusion process, whereas interlayer porosity is shown to imply a small proportion of HDO adsorption. This study provides evidence that vermiculite is a promising reference mineral for the understanding of the roles played by pore structure and mineral-water interaction in the transport properties of water in claystones and for associated refinement of dual-porosity diffusion models.
Materials | 2018
Thomas Dabat; Arnaud Mazurier; Fabien Hubert; Emmanuel Tertre; Brian Grégoire; Baptiste Dazas; Eric Ferrage
The anisotropic properties of clay-rich porous media have significant impact on the directional dependence of fluids migration in environmental and engineering sciences. This anisotropy, linked to the preferential orientation of flat anisometric clay minerals particles, is studied here on the basis of the simulation of three-dimensional packings of non-interacting disks, using a sequential deposition algorithm under a gravitational field. Simulations show that the obtained porosities fall onto a single master curve when plotted against the anisotropy value. This finding is consistent with results from sedimentation experiments using polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) disks and subsequent extraction of particle anisotropy through X-ray microtomography. Further geometrical analyses of computed porous media highlight that both particle orientation and particle aggregation are responsible of the evolution of porosity as a function of anisotropy. Moreover, morphological analysis of the porous media using chord length measurements shows that the anisotropy of the pore and solid networks can be correlated with particle orientation. These results indicate that computed porous media, mimicking the organization of clay minerals, can be used to shed light on the anisotropic properties of fluid transfer in clay-based materials.
ACS Omega | 2018
Patrice Porion; Eric Ferrage; Fabien Hubert; Emmanuel Tertre; Thomas Dabat; Anne Marie Faugère; Fatou Condé; Fabienne Warmont; Alfred Delville
1H NMR pulsed gradient spin echo attenuation and water density profile analysis by magnetic resonance imaging are both used to determine the mobility of water molecules confined within a porous network of compacted kaolinite clay sample (total porosity of ∼50%). These two complementary experimental procedures efficiently probe molecular diffusion within time scales varying between milliseconds and few hours, filling the gap between the time scale of diffusion dynamics measured by traditional quasi elastic neutron scattering and through-diffusion methods. Furthermore, magnetic resonance imaging is a nondestructive investigation tool that is able to assess the effect of the local structure on the macroscopic mobility of the diffusing probe.
European Journal of Soil Science | 2009
Fabien Hubert; Laurent Caner; Alain Meunier; Bruno Lanson
Geoderma | 2007
Fabien Hubert; Vincent Hallaire; Paul Sardini; Laurent Caner; Djilali Heddadj