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Improving mechanical stability of ZSM-5 zeolite by defect-healing treatment
Aluminosilicate zeolites are a group of microporous materials widely used in numerous technical applications as catalysts, adsorbents and ion exchangers. Zeolites are subjected to mechanical stress throughout their lifecycle, resulting in the loss of their crystallinity and micropore volume. Therefo...
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Published in: | Microporous and mesoporous materials 2024-05, Vol.372, p.113087, Article 113087 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Aluminosilicate zeolites are a group of microporous materials widely used in numerous technical applications as catalysts, adsorbents and ion exchangers. Zeolites are subjected to mechanical stress throughout their lifecycle, resulting in the loss of their crystallinity and micropore volume. Therefore, developing zeolites with excellent mechanical properties is important. Recently, our group has reported a liquid-mediated, defect-healing treatment to eliminate the silanol defects in aluminosilicate zeolites with high Si/Al ratios, resulting in imparting extreme chemical stability against water vapor, one of the major chemical damages to destroy zeolite structures. Herein, we investigate an influence of a liquid-mediated, defect-healing treatment on the intrinsic mechanical features of zeolites. ZSM-5 is selected as the target zeolite in this study. Silanol defects in the parent ZSM-5 (HSZ-890HOA, Tosoh) are eliminated by a liquid-mediated, defect-healing treatment. The parent and healed zeolites are subjected to planetary ball milling to compare their mechanical stabilities. Planetary ball-milling treatments, such as rotation at 600 rpm, degrade the crystalline structures of both the parent and healed ZSM-5 with an increase in duration. The diffraction peaks corresponding to the MFI-type structure in parent ZSM-5 completely diminish after planetary ball milling for 60 min. Conversely, diffraction peaks in healed ZSM-5 were retained after such operations, confirming that the mechanical stability of zeolites was enhanced by the liquid-mediated, defect-healing treatment.
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•Silanol defects in the parent ZSM-5 were healed by the liquid-mediated treatment.•Mechanical stability of the parent and the defect-healed ZSM-5 were compared.•Planetary ball-milling was performed to compare mechanical stability of zeolites.•Defect-healed ZSM-5 exhibited the enhanced mechanical stability. |
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ISSN: | 1387-1811 1873-3093 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.micromeso.2024.113087 |