A comparative study of three methods of water removal prior to resin impregnation of two soils

Summary The water in replicate samples from sub-surface horizons of a clayey and a fine-silty soil was removed either by oven-drying, freeze-drying or by acetone-replacement prior to resin impregnation. Pore space photograms (pores >60 μm diam.) from thin sections were analysed on a Quantimet 720 image analysing computer following each drying technique. During oven- and freeze-drying the clayey soil contracted considerably and subsequently satisfactory impregnation of these samples was either difficult or impossible. This macro-shrinkage caused a decrease in number and lengths of most planar pores and a decrease in size and number of all intra-aggregate pores. The loss in pore space and continuity obviously affected resin impregnation. The clayey samples in which water was replaced by acetone, and all samples of the silty soil, however pretreated, showed no measurable macro-shrinkage and all impregnated well. Oven-drying the silty soil appears to increase the porosity, causing an increase in size of all pores. A mechanism for this apparent enlargement is proposed. It is evident that acetone-replacement of the soil water prior to resin impregnation is the best of the three methods used here and should be seriously considered when image analysis is to be carried out on resin-impregnated blocks from soils of similar or related textures.