Overview
FrançaisABSTRACT
Zeolites are perfectly crystallized aluminosilicates with a regular nanopore system consisting of a network of channels (and cages) with a diameter of less than 10 Å. This article presents the advances made in their synthesis and in the post-synthesis treatments that allow their use in three main areas: separation and purification by adsorption, cationic exchange, and selective catalysis. This last field is by far the most diverse: oxidative, basic, acid and bifunctional catalysis, the most important applications for adding value being in refining and petrochemical processes operating through acid and bifunctional catalysis.
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Read the articleAUTHORS
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Michel GUISNET: University Professor - Catalysis in Organic Chemistry, Poitiers, France - Center for Biological and Chemical Engineering, Lisbon, Portugal
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Ludovic PINARD: Senior Lecturer, Member of the Board of the French Zeolite Group (GFZ) - Institut de Chimie des Milieux et des Matériaux de Poitiers (IC2MP) - UMR CNRS 7285, University of Poitiers, France
INTRODUCTION
Zeolites are perfectly crystallized minerals with a regular nanoporous system consisting of a network of channels with diameters of less than 10 Å (1 nm) and cages or intersections of channels; these nanodimensions, close to those of organic molecules, explain why zeolites are used in many industrial processes. Their history begins with the discovery in 1756 by the Swedish mineralogist Crönstedt of a mineral (stilbite) which, due to its high water content, swelled when heated in a flame. This property led him to attribute the name zeolite, derived from the Greek words zeo and lithos (zeolite: boiling stone) to this new family of minerals (aluminosilicates). For a very long time, natural zeolites were mainly used in jewelry for the beauty of their crystals. The development of hydrothermal synthesis and the discovery of large sedimentary basins have enabled zeolites to be used on a large scale and for a wide range of applications: separation by molecular sieving, purification by adsorption, cation exchange and catalysis. Both hydrothermal synthesis and post-synthesis processing lead to zeolites of well-defined structure and composition, which has greatly facilitated their industrial use.
This article has two main objectives:
describe the key steps involved in zeolite synthesis and post-synthesis treatments: cation exchange, dealumination, desilication, etc. ;
present and explain the effect of their physical and physicochemical characteristics: confinement of reagents in nanopores, nature, concentration, strength of active sites, etc. on their activity, selectivity and stability in the main industrial processes operating by acid, bifunctional redox-acid, basic or oxidation catalysis.
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KEYWORDS
catalysis | nanopores | confinement | shape selectivity
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