4.6 Article

Hierarchically porous and mechanically stable monoliths from ordered mesoporous silica and their water filtration potential

Journal

NANOSCALE ADVANCES
Volume 4, Issue 18, Pages 3892-3908

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2na00368f

Keywords

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Funding

  1. German Research Foundation
  2. Open Access Publication Fund of TU Berlin
  3. Technische Universitat Berlin [EXC 2008-390540038-UniSysCat]

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This study investigates the effects of different sintering techniques on the preparation of lightweight micro-/meso-/macroporous monoliths from ordered mesoporous silica. The results show that spark plasma sintered monoliths exhibit higher mechanical properties and good permeability, making them suitable for various filtration and separation applications.
Mechanically stable structures with interconnected hierarchical porosity combine the benefits of both small and large pores, such as high surface area, pore volume, and good mass transport capabilities. Hence, lightweight micro-/meso-/macroporous monoliths are prepared from ordered mesoporous silica COK-12 by means of spark plasma sintering (SPS, S-sintering) and compared to conventionally (C-) sintered monoliths. A multi-scale model is developed to fit the small angle X-ray scattering data and obtain information on the hexagonal lattice parameters, pore sizes from the macro to the micro range, as well as the dimensions of the silica population. For both sintering techniques, the overall mesoporosity, hexagonal pore ordering, and amorphous character are preserved. The monoliths' porosity (77-49%), mesopore size (6.2-5.2 nm), pore volume (0.50-0.22 g cm(-3)), and specific surface area (451-180 m(2) g(-1)) decrease with increasing processing temperature and pressure. While the difference in porosity is enhanced, the structural parameters between the C-and S-sintered monoliths are largely converging at 900 degrees C, except for the mesopore size and lattice parameter, whose dimensions are more extensively preserved in the S-sintered monoliths, however, coming along with larger deviations from the theoretical lattice. Their higher mechanical properties (biaxial strength up to 49 MPa, 724 MPa HV 9.807 N) at comparable porosities and ability to withstand ultrasonic treatment and dead-end filtration up to 7 bar allow S-sintered monoliths to reach a high permeance (2634 L m(-2) h(-1) bar(-1)), permeability (1.25 x 10(-14) m(2)), and ability to reduce the chemical oxygen demand by 90% during filtration of a surfactant-stabilized oil in water emulsion, while indicating reasonable resistance towards fouling.

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