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1.
Langmuir ; 34(38): 11414-11423, 2018 09 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30188140

ABSTRACT

The texture of mesoporous FAU-Y (FAUmes) prepared by surfactant-templating in basic media is a subject of debate. It is proposed that mesoporous FAU-Y consists of: (1) ordered mesoporous zeolite networks formed by a surfactant-assisted zeolite rearrangement process involving local dissolution and reconstruction of the crystalline framework, and (2) ordered mesoporous amorphous phases as Al-MCM-41, which coexist with zeolite nanodomains obtained by a dissolution-reassembly process. By the present systematic study, performed with FAU-Y (Si/Al = 15) in the presence of octadecyltrimethylammonium bromide and 0 < NaOH/Si ratio < 0.25 at 115 °C for 20 h, we demonstrate that mesoporous FAU zeolites consist, in fact, of a complex family of materials with textural features strongly impacted by the experimental conditions. Two main families have been disclosed: (1) for 0.0625 < NaOH/Si < 0.10, FAUmes are ordered mesoporous materials with zeolite walls, which coexist with zeolite nanodomains (100-200 nm) and (2) for 0.125 < NaOH/Si < 0.25, FAUmes are ordered mesoporous materials with amorphous walls as Al-MCM-41, which coexist with zeolite nanodomains (5-100 nm). The zeolite nanodomains decrease in size with the increase of NaOH/Si ratio. Increasing NaOH/Si ratio leads to an increase of mesopore volume, while the total surface area remains constant, and to a decrease of strong acidity in line with the decrease of micropore volume. The ordered mesoporous materials with zeolite walls feature the highest acidity strength. The ordered mesoporous materials with amorphous walls present additional large pores (50-200 nm), which increase in size and amount with the increase of NaOH/Si ratio. This alkaline treatment of FAU-Y represents a way to obtain ordered mesoporous materials with zeolite walls with high mesopore volume for NaOH/Si = 0.10 and a new way to synthesize mesoporous Al-MCM-41 materials containing extralarge pores (50-200 nm) ideal for optimal diffusion (NaOH/Si = 0.25).

2.
Langmuir ; 30(44): 13266-74, 2014 Nov 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25232908

ABSTRACT

The t-plot method is a well-known technique which allows determining the micro- and/or mesoporous volumes and the specific surface area of a sample by comparison with a reference adsorption isotherm of a nonporous material having the same surface chemistry. In this paper, the validity of the t-plot method is discussed in the case of hierarchical porous materials exhibiting both micro- and mesoporosities. Different hierarchical zeolites with MCM-41 type ordered mesoporosity are prepared using pseudomorphic transformation. For comparison, we also consider simple mechanical mixtures of microporous and mesoporous materials. We first show an intrinsic failure of the t-plot method; this method does not describe the fact that, for a given surface chemistry and pressure, the thickness of the film adsorbed in micropores or small mesopores (< 10σ, σ being the diameter of the adsorbate) increases with decreasing the pore size (curvature effect). We further show that such an effect, which arises from the fact that the surface area and, hence, the free energy of the curved gas/liquid interface decreases with increasing the film thickness, is captured using the simple thermodynamical model by Derjaguin. The effect of such a drawback on the ability of the t-plot method to estimate the micro- and mesoporous volumes of hierarchical samples is then discussed, and an abacus is given to correct the underestimated microporous volume by the t-plot method.

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