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Published online 4 September 2009
Clay Minerals; June 2009; v. 44; no. 2; p. 267-278; DOI: 10.1180/claymin.2009.044.2.267
© 2009 Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland
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Research Paper

Microwave irradiation used for all steps of pre-pillaring Al-montmorillonite

S. Yapar1,*, R. M. Torres Sánchez2, M. Emreol1, P. Weidler3 and K. Emmerich3,4

1 Ege University, Chemical Engineering Department, 35100 Bornova, Izmir, Turkey,2 CETMIC, Camino Centenario y 506, (1897) M. B. Gonnet, Argentina, 3 Institute of Functional Interfaces, Forschungszentrum Karlsruhe, Germany, and4 Competence Center for Material Moisture, University of Karlsruhe, Germany

* E-mail: saadet.yapar{at}ege.edu.tr

(Received 24 March 2008; revised 25 February 2009)

In this study, a new procedure for the synthesis of pillared clays is proposed. Ageing processes and intercalation reactions were carried out using microwave irradiation in order to decrease the consumption of three industrially-important parameters; time, water consumption and energy. The effects of microwave irradiation, the amount of Al and the Al3+/clay ratio on the physicochemical properties of Al-pillared montmorillonites were investigated. The structural changes, depending on the intercalation and microwave irradiation, were characterized using X-ray diffraction (XRD), Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) analyses and by measuring the specific surface area and pore-size distribution. Additionally, simultaneous thermal analyses (STA) and zeta potential measurements were carried out to determine physicochemical properties. According to the XRD measurements, the d001 value of microwave-irradiated samples is not affected by the amount of Al and the Al3+/clay ratio; microwave irradiation causes a 0.20 nm contraction in the d001 value in comparison to that of a conventionally pillared sample. The results of FTIR analyses reveal that the intensity of peaks assigned to Keggin-OH and Keggin-H2O stretches is diminished in the case of microwave-irradiated samples. The STA analyses indicate that the amount of water released during dehydroxylation is decreased in the case of microwave-irradiated samples. By considering the contraction in d001 values and the decreases in Keggin-stretching bands and also in the amount of dehydroxylation water, it was concluded that microwave irradiation has a calcination effect.

KEYWORDS: STA, XRD, SEM, isoelectric point, FTIR, water-vapour adsorption







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