Hostname: page-component-7bb8b95d7b-fmk2r Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-10-01T15:27:35.452Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Rectorite Pillared with Ce-Modified Aluminum Oxide

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 February 2011

Jianxin Wu
Affiliation:
Washington Research Center, W. R. Grace & Co., 7379 Route 32, Columbia, Maryland, USA
Edward F. Rakiewicz
Affiliation:
Washington Research Center, W. R. Grace & Co., 7379 Route 32, Columbia, Maryland, USA
Robert R. Gatte
Affiliation:
Washington Research Center, W. R. Grace & Co., 7379 Route 32, Columbia, Maryland, USA
Get access

Abstract

Rectorite clay was pillared with an Al/Ce-cluster pillaring agent made from aluminum chlorhydrol and cerium nitrate. The resulting product had an interlayer distance of 15.7 Å, which was significantly larger than the interlayer distance obtained using conventional aluminum chlorhydrol as the pillaring agent (8.4 Å). Argon adsorption analysis indicates that the pores of the AL/Ce-cluster pillared rectorite are non-uniform, with pore diameters ranging from 5 to 16Å. 29Si MAS NMR studies showed that calcining the natural rectorite changes the silicon environment, while the pillared rectorite clays are much more resistant to such changes upon calcination. It is suggested that pillaring reactions enhance the thermal stability of the rectorite by stabilizing the local silicon environment in the clay.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 1995

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Burch, R., Ed., Catalysis Today 2, 185 (1988).Google Scholar
2 Vaughan, David E. W., Lussier, Roger J., and Magee, John S. Jr, . U.S. Patent No. 4 176 090 (27 Nov. 1979).Google Scholar
3 Ge, Z., Li, D., and Pinnavaia, T. J., Microporous Materials 3, 165 (1994).Google Scholar
4 McCauley, John R., U.S. Patent No. 5 202 295 (13 April 1993)Google Scholar
5 Guan, Jingjie, Min, Enze, and Yu, Zhiqing, U.S. Patent No. 4 757 040 (12 July 1988).Google Scholar
6 Guan, J. et al. , Proc Int. Conf. Pet. Refin. Petrochem. Process 3, 1255 (1991).Google Scholar
7 Occelli, M. L., in Preparation of Catalysts V, edited by Poncelet, G. et al. (Elsevier Science Publishers, Amsterdam, 1991), p. 287.Google Scholar
8 Occelli, M. L., Dominguez, J. M., and Eckert, H., J. Catal. 141, 510 (1993).Google Scholar
9 Baes, C. F. and Mesmer, R. E., The Hydrolysis of Cations, (Krieger Publishing, Florida, 1976), p. 118.Google Scholar
10 Horvath, G. and Kawazoe, K. J., J. Chem. Eng. Jpn. 16, 470 (1983).Google Scholar
11 , Plee, Borg, F., Gatineau, L., and Fripiat, J. J., J. Am. Chem. Soc. 107, 2362 (1985).Google Scholar