19 research outputs found
Catalytic activity of nickel sulfide catalysts supported on Al-pillared montmorillonite for thiophene hydrodesulfurization.
Al-pillared clays, prepared by exchange with partly hydrolyzed aluminium nitrate solutions, dried in air or freeze-dried, and calcined, were used as supports for nickel sulfide catalysts. The catalysts were tested on their hydrodesulfurization (HDS) activity for thiophene. The catalysts show a high thiophene HDS activity. It appears that details in the preparation and calcination of the pillared clays have a strong influence on the catalytic activity
Catalytic activity of nickel sulfide catalysts supported on Al-pillared montmorillonite for thiophene hydrodesulfurization.
Al-pillared clays, prepared by exchange with partly hydrolyzed aluminium nitrate solutions, dried in air or freeze-dried, and calcined, were used as supports for nickel sulfide catalysts. The catalysts were tested on their hydrodesulfurization (HDS) activity for thiophene. The catalysts show a high thiophene HDS activity. It appears that details in the preparation and calcination of the pillared clays have a strong influence on the catalytic activity
Pillared clays : preparation and characterization of clay minerals and aluminum-based pillaring agents
After an extensive introductory chapter (Chapter I), in which the background and
the aim of the research is dealt with, the hydrothermal synthesis and the
characterization of Na-beidellite is discussed in Chapter II and III. The conditions
of temperature, water pressure, and sodium activity under which Na-beidellite can
be synthesized in the chemical system Na20-AI203-Si02-H20 are investigated in
Chapter IV. The stability field is limited at low temperatures by the formation of
kaolinite and at high temperatures by that of paragonite and quartz. In Chapter V
solid-state magic-angle spinning 23Na NMR combined with XRD and TGA is used
to study the interlayer collapse and the migration of sodium present at the
interlayer during dehydration of synthetic Na-beidellite. It is shown that the Na+
surrounded by two water molecules is relocated in the hexagonal cavities of the
tetrahedral sheet.
The low-temperature synthesis of ammonium-saponites is considered in Chapter
VI, while solid-state 27AI NMR combined with 29Si I\lMR provides evidence for the
presence of AI at the octahedral and the interlayer sites as dealt with in Chapter
VII. In Chapter VIII a model is developed for the crystallization of saponite based
on the hydrothermal synthesis of ammonium-saponite at increasing periods of
aging time. Chapter IX discusses the synthesis of Mg-saponites using gels
containing different competing cations.
Since the preparation of AI pillaring agents is highly important in the preparation
of pillared clays, much work has been devoted to the study of the forced
hydrolysis of AI3+. Chapter X to XV are dealing with NMR studies of the aqueous
chemistry of AI3+. Chapter X to XIII concentrate on the formation, thermal stability,
and aging of monomeric, oligomeric, and tridecameric A13+ species during forced
hydrolysis. In Chapter XIII direct evidence based on NMR line broadening data for
the existence of the [AI(OH)2] + species is provided. The aging of the tridecameric
AI complex in partly hydrolyzed AI-sec-butoxide solutions and the reaction to
fibrous boehmite are considered in Chapter XIV. Chapter XV and XVI deal with the
characterization, thermal stability, and NMR properties of basic AI sulfate resulting from addition of sodium sulfate solution to partly hydrolyzed AI solutions
containing the tridecameric AI species, such as described in Chapter X to XIII.
Pillaring and thermal treatment of synthetic beidellite and natural montmorillonite
is described in Chapter XVII and the catalytic conversion of thiophene over pillared
clays into which nickel has been applied in Chapter XVIII. Finally in Chapter XIX
some concluding remarks concerning the results obtained in this study and the
implications for the applications of (synthetic) clay minerals in catalytic reactions are mad
Identification by RAMAN Microscopy of magnesian vivianite formed from Fe2+, Mg, Mn2+ and PO4 3- in a Roman camp near fort Vechten, Utrecht, The Netherlands
The presence of a magnesian vivianite (Fe2+)2.5(Mg, Mn, Ca)0.5(PO4)2. 8H2O, has been identified in a soil sample form a Roman camp near Fort Vechten, The Netherlands, using a combination of Raman microscopy and scanning electron microscopy. An unsubstituted vivianite and baricite were characterized for comparative reasons. The split phosphate-stretching mode is recognized around 1115, 1062 and 1015 cm-1, while the corresponding bending modes are found around 591, 519, 471 and 422 cm-1. The substitution of Mg and Mn for Fe2+ in the crystal structure causes a shift towards higher wavenumbers compared to pure vivianite. As shown by the baričite sample substitution causes a broadening of the bands. The observed broadening however is larger than can be explained by substitution alone. The low intensity of the water bands, especially in the OH-stretching region between 2700 and 3700 cm-1 indicates that the magnesian vivianite is partially dehydrated, which explains the much larger broadening than the observed broadening caused by substitution of Mg and Mn in vivianite and baričite
Complexity of Intercalation of Hydrazine into Kaolinite - A Controlled Rate Thermal Analysis and DRIFT Spectroscopic Study
Controlled rate thermal analysis (CRTA) allows the separation of adsorbed and intercalated hydrazine. CRTA displays the presence of three different types of hydrogen-bonded hydrazine in the intercalation complex: (a) The first is adsorbed loosely bonded on the kaolinite structure fully expanded by hydrazine–hydrate and liberated between approx 50 and 70 degrees Celsius (b) The second intercalated hydrazine is lost between approx 70 and 85 degrees Celsius. (c) The third type of intercalated-hydrazine molecule is lost in the 85–130 degrees Celsius range. CRTA at 70 degrees Celsius enables the removal of hydrazine–water and results in the partial collapse of the hydrazine-intercalated kaolinite structure to form a hydrazine-intercalated kaolinite. Removal of the adsorbed hydrazine enables the DRIFT spectra of the hydrazine-intercalated complex without any adsorbed hydrazine to be obtained. A band at 3626 cm−1 attributed to the inner surface hydroxyls of kaolinite hydrogen bonded to hydrazine is observed. The intercalation of hydrazine–hydrate into kaolinite is complex and results from the different types of surface interactions of the hydrazine with the kaolinite surfaces