Cerâmica (Oct 1998)
Powdered microporous glasses: changing porosity through aging
Abstract
Recently, we have reported the production of a microporous high purity silica powder from the acid leaching of glasses with average pore size around 2.5nm and specific surface area of 420m2/g (BET). The employed glasses derived from the melting of two types of waste from the industrial processing of Brazilian oil shale (retorted oil shale and the top fraction of the intermediate layer of Irati Formation). Depending on the proportion of the two wastes employed in the formulation of the glasses, either a silica gel or a powdered one is obtained, after leaching. The acid leaching of those glasses with hydrochloric acid, at 90 °C, was used to produce powdered microporous silica. In the present work it is studied the effect of aging time and temperature on the morphology and structure of the obtained powdered silica. Aging studies were performed in two different media, an acidic (hydrochloric acid) and a basic one (ammonium hydroxide) for different periods of time and temperatures. XRD, SEM/EDX, TEM, specific surface area measurements and DTA/TGA were used to characterize these materials. The results have shown a decrease of specific surface area with increasing time and temperature. Apparently, this behavior may be associated with dissolution and re-precipitation mechanisms.
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