6.3 Chemical Weathering

Steven Earle and Laura J. Brown

Chemical weathering alters the chemical composition of the rock and results from chemical changes to minerals that become unstable when they are exposed to surface conditions. The kinds of changes that take place are highly specific to the mineral and the environmental conditions. Some minerals, like quartz, are virtually unaffected by chemical weathering, while others, like feldspar, are easily altered. In general, the degree of chemical weathering is greatest in warm and wet climates and least in cold and dry climates. The important characteristics of surface conditions that lead to chemical weathering are the presence of water (in the air and on the ground surface), the abundance of oxygen, and the presence of carbon dioxide, which produces weak carbonic acid when combined with water. That process, which is fundamental to most chemical weathering, can be shown as follows:

H2O + CO2 ↔ H2CO3   then    H2CO3 ↔ H+ + HCO3

water + carbon dioxide ↔  carbonic acid    then     carbonic acid  ↔  dissolved hydrogen ions + dissolved bicarbonate ions

Yikes! Chemical formulas

Lots of people seize up when they are asked to read chemical or mathematical formulas.  It’s OK; you don’t necessarily have to!  If you don’t like the formulas, just read the text underneath them.  In time you may get used to reading the formulas.

The double-ended arrow “” indicates that the reaction can go either way, but these reactions are going towards the right for our purposes.

Here we have water (e.g., as rain) plus carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, combining to create carbonic acid. Then carbonic acid dissociates (comes apart) to form hydrogen and bicarbonate ions. The amount of CO2 in the air is enough to make weak carbonic acid.  There is typically much more CO2 in the soil, so water that percolates through the soil can become more acidic.  In either case, this acidic water is critical to chemical weathering.

In some types of chemical weathering, the original mineral becomes altered to a different mineral. For example, feldspar is altered—by hydrolysis—to form clay minerals plus some ions in solution. In other cases, the minerals dissolve completely, and their components go into solution. For example, calcite (CaCO3) is soluble in acidic solutions.

The hydrolysis of feldspar can be written like this:

CaAl2Si2O+ H2CO3  + ½O2 ↔ Al2Si2O5(OH)4 +   Ca2+ +  CO32−

plagioclase feldspar + carbonic acid kaolinite + dissolved calcium ions + dissolved carbonate ions

This reaction shows calcium-bearing plagioclase feldspar, but similar reactions could also be written for sodium or potassium feldspars. In this case, we end up with the mineral kaolinite and calcium and carbonate ions in solution. Those ions can eventually combine (probably in the ocean) to form the mineral calcite. The hydrolysis of feldspar to clay is illustrated in Figure 6.12, which shows two images of the same granitic rock, a recently broken fresh surface on the left and a clay-altered weathered surface on the right. Other silicate minerals can also undergo hydrolysis, although the end results will be slightly different. For example, pyroxene can be converted to the clay minerals chlorite or smectite, and olivine can be converted to the clay mineral serpentine.

two photographs comparing weathered and unweathered granite
Figure 6.12 Unweathered (left) and weathered (right) surfaces of the same piece of granitic rock. On the unweathered surfaces, the feldspars are still fresh and glassy-looking. Much of the feldspar has been altered on the weathered surface to the chalky-looking clay mineral kaolinite.

Oxidation is another very important chemical weathering process. The oxidation of the iron in a ferromagnesian silicate starts with the dissolution of the iron. For olivine, the process looks like this where olivine in the presence of carbonic acid is converted to dissolved iron, carbonate, and silicic acid:

Fe2SiO4+ 4H2CO3  ↔  2Fe2+ +  4HCO3  +  H4SiO4

olivine + (carbonic acid) dissolved iron ions + dissolved carbonate ions + dissolved silicic acid

But in the presence of oxygen and carbonic acid, the dissolved iron is then quickly converted to the mineral hematite:

2Fe2+  + 4HCO3 + ½ O2  +  2H2O ↔ Fe2O3   + 4H2CO3

dissolved iron ions + dissolved bicarbonate ions + oxygen + water hematite + carbonic acid

The equation shown here is for olivine, but it could apply to almost any other ferromagnesian silicate, including pyroxene, amphibole, or biotite. In this way, iron in the sulphide minerals (e.g., pyrite) can also be oxidized. And the mineral hematite is not the only possible end result, as a wide range of iron oxide minerals can form in this way. The results of this process are illustrated in Figure 6.13, which shows a granitic rock in which some of the biotite and amphibole have been altered to form the iron oxide mineral limonite.

closeup photograph of granite
Figure 6.13 A granitic rock containing biotite and amphibole, which have been altered near the rock’s surface to limonite, which is a mixture of iron oxide minerals.

A special type of oxidation occurs in areas where the rocks have elevated levels of sulphide minerals, especially pyrite (FeS2). Pyrite reacts with water and oxygen to form sulphuric acid, as follows:

2FeS2  + 7O2 + 2H2O ↔ 2Fe2+   H2SO+ 2H+

pyrite + oxygen + water dissolved iron ions + sulphuric acid + dissolved hydrogen ions

The runoff from areas where this process occurs is known as acid rock drainage (ARD), and even rock with 1% or 2% pyrite can produce significant ARD. Some of the worst examples of ARD are at metal mine sites, especially where pyrite-bearing rock and waste material have been mined from deep underground, piled up, and left exposed to water and oxygen. One example of that is the Mt. Washington Mine near Courtenay on Vancouver Island (Figure 6.14), but there are many similar sites across Canada and around the world.

two photographs showing the impact of mine waste
Figure 6.14 Exposed oxidizing and acid-generating rocks and mine waste at the abandoned Mt. Washington Mine, B.C. (left), and an example of acid drainage downstream from the mine site (right).

At many ARD sites, the pH of the runoff water is less than 4 (very acidic). Under these conditions, metals such as copper, zinc, and lead are quite soluble, which can lead to toxicity for aquatic and other organisms. For many years, the river downstream from the Mt. Washington Mine had so much dissolved copper in it that it was toxic to salmon. Remediation work has since been carried out at the mine, and the situation has improved.

The hydrolysis of feldspar and other silicate minerals and the oxidation of iron in ferromagnesian silicates all serve to create softer and weaker rocks than they were, to begin with, and thus more susceptible to mechanical weathering.

The weathering reactions that we’ve discussed so far involved transforming one mineral to another mineral (e.g., feldspar to clay) and releasing some ions in solution (e.g., Ca2+ or Fe2+). Some weathering processes involve the complete dissolution of a mineral. Calcite, for example, will dissolve in weak acid to produce calcium and bicarbonate ions. The equation is as follows:

CaCO3  + H+   + HCO3  ↔  Ca2+  + 2HCO3

calcite + dissolved hydrogen ions + dissolved bicarbonate ions ↔  dissolved  calcium ions + dissolved bicarbonate ions

Calcite is the major component of limestone (typically more than 95%), and under surface conditions, limestone can dissolve completely, as shown in Figure 6.15. Limestone also dissolves at relatively shallow depths underground, forming limestone caves.

closeup photograph of limestone
Figure 6.15 A limestone outcrop on Quadra Island, B.C. The limestone, which is primarily made up of the mineral calcite, has been dissolved to different degrees in different areas because of compositional differences. The buff-coloured bands are chert, which stands out because it is not soluble.

Exercise 6.2 Chemical Weathering

The main processes of chemical weathering are hydrolysis, oxidation, and dissolution. Indicate which process is primarily involved during each of the following chemical weathering changes:

  1. Pyrite to hematite
  2. Calcite to calcium and bicarbonate ions
  3. Feldspar to clay
  4. Olivine to serpentine

 

Media Attributions

  • Figure 6.12, 6.13, 6.14, 6.15: © Steven Earle. CC BY.

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6.3 Chemical Weathering Copyright © 2022 by Steven Earle and Laura J. Brown is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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