Porous clays and pillared clays-based catalysts. Part 2: A review of the catalytic and molecular sieve applications


Autoria(s): Ding, Z.; Kloprogge, J. T.; Frost, R. L.; Lu, M. G.; Zhu, H. Y.
Data(s)

01/12/2001

Resumo

Metal oxide pillared clay (PILC) possesses several interesting properties, such as large surface area, high pore volume and tunable pore size (from micropore to mesopore), high thermal stability, strong surface acidity and catalytic active substrates/metal oxide pillars. These unique characteristics make PILC an attractive material in catalytic reactions. It can be made either as catalyst support or directly used as catalyst. This paper is a continuous work from Kloprogge's review (J.T. Kloprogge, J. Porous Mater. 5, 5 1998) on the synthesis and properties of smectites and related PILCs and will focus on the diverse applications of clay pillared with different types of metal oxides in the heterogeneous catalysis area and adsorption area. The relation between the performance of the PILC and its physico-chemical features will be addressed.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:37796

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Kluwer Academic Publ

Palavras-Chave #Chemistry, Applied #Chemistry, Physical #Materials Science, Multidisciplinary #Catalytic Reactions #Adsorption #Pilc #Porous Structures #Surface Acidity #Acid-activated Clays #Wet Peroxide Oxidation #High Thermal-stability #Phase Deep Oxidation #High-surface-area #Ceramic Membranes #Nitric-oxide #Montmorillonite Clay #Tio2-pillared Clay #Controlled-release #C1 #250103 Colloid and Surface Chemistry #660199 Energy transformation not elsewhere classified
Tipo

Journal Article