Spectral induced polarization characterization of non-consolidated clays
for varying salinities - an experimental study
Abstract
Clay material characterization is of importance for many geo-engineering
and environmental applications, and geo-electrical methods are often
used to detect them in the subsurface. Spectral induced polarization
(SIP) is a geo-electric method that non-intrusively measures the
frequency-dependent complex electrical conductivity of a material, in
the mHz to the kHz range. We present a new SIP dataset of four different
types of clay (a red montmorillonite sample, a green montmorillonite
sample, a kaolinite sample, and an illite sample) at five different
salinities (initially de-ionized water, ~10-3,
~10-2, ~10-1, and 1 mol/L of NaCl). We
propose a new laboratory protocol that allows the repeatable
characterization of clay samples. The complex conductivity spectra are
interpreted with the widely used phenomenological double-Pelton model.
We observe an increase of the real part of the conductivity with
salinity for all types of clay, while the imaginary part presents a non
monotonous behavior. The decrease of polarization over conduction with
salinity is interpreted as evidence that conduction increases with
salinity faster than polarization. We test the empirical petrophysical
relationship between σ”surf and σ’surf and validate this approach based
on our experimental data and two other datasets from the literature.
With this dataset we can better understand the frequency-dependent
electrical response of different types of clay. This unique dataset of
complex conductivity spectra for different types of clay samples is a
step forward toward better characterization of clay formations in situ.