4.7 Article

Stepwise dehydration of thomsonite (THO) with disordered Si/Al distribution: A new partially hydrated phase

Journal

MICROPOROUS AND MESOPOROUS MATERIALS
Volume 346, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.micromeso.2022.112308

Keywords

Zeolites; Dehydration; THO; XRD

Funding

  1. National Science Center of Poland [UMO-2019/35/O/ST10/01015]
  2. Preludium Bis 1 project of the Polish National Agency for Academic Exchange

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The dehydration behavior of a natural thomsonite with disordered Si/Al distribution was investigated, revealing structural changes and crystal form transitions with increasing temperature.
The structural transformations occurring as a function of increasing temperature in zeolites are of interest because the porous structure, and therefore the physical properties, can significantly change. Zeolites with THO framework type are small-pore materials, which received attention because of their ap-plications in catalytic processes. The majority of THO zeolites (synthetic and natural) are characterized by an ordered distribution of the cations at the tetrahedral sites. To date, few cases of disordered thomsonite have been reported. In this study, we investigated the dehydration behaviour of a natural thomsonite with disordered Si/Al distribution and chemical composition Ca3.34Na2.66Si11Al9O40 center dot 12H2O. The structure was determined from room temperature (RT) to 698 K in order to compare the thermal behaviour with that reported for the ordered variety. Accurate structural analysis was performed by in situ single crystal X-ray diffraction. The dehydration starts at 348 K. Up to 498 K, thomsonite gradually releases four H2O. From 498 to 573 K, additional four H2O are lost and the space group changes from orthorhombic (Pbmn) to monoclinic (P21/n). This partially hydrated phase is characterized by a unit-cell volume contraction of-3% with respect to the RT phase and by a rearrangement of the extraframework cations in the zeolitic pores. The thermally treated thomsonite is able to reabsorb 50% of the lost H2O and transforms to the orthorhombic phase, equivalent to that observed at lower temperatures. However, the diffraction pattern analysis indicated a high degree of mosaicity, most probably due to the residual stress accumulated during the phase transformation.

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