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Review: Progress with Functional Materials Based on Loess Particles
- Ya Shen, Haiyan Yan, Rongmin Wang, Pengfei Song, Yufeng He
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 01 January 2024, pp. 301-314
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Loess is a large-scale deposit which is easy to mine and widely distributed on the epipedon. The clay fraction of loess, also known as ‘loessial clay’, is a very important component of loess which affects its properties and performance. From a ‘materials’ perspective, the clay fraction of loess has been ignored. Recently, loess particles have attracted interest because of their potential applications. The focus in the current review is on the methods of modifying loess particles and their application as functional materials. The major components of loess particles are clays, calcite, and quartz, with the clays including kaolinite, illite, montmorillonite, and chlorite. Loess has a range of particle sizes, types, and dispersibilities. The particles agglomerate readily, mainly because cementation occurs readily in the clay fraction. Loess particles can be modified and their properties can be improved by compaction, separation, purification, acidification, calcination, surfactant modification, geopolymerization, and polymer modification. Loess-based functional materials have been used as sorbents, eco-friendly superabsorbents, soil and water conservation materials, humidity-regulating materials, and building materials. Separated and purified loess particles can adsorb metal ions and harmful elements directly. Surfactant-modified loess particles can remove organic compounds effectively. After modification with polymers, loess particles exhibit greater capacity for the removal of environmental pollutants such as harmful metal ions and dyes. As a superabsorbent, modified loess shows excellent thermal stability and swelling behavior. Calcined loess could be utilized as an energy-saving building material with good humidity-regulating performance, and geological polymerization has further expanded the scope of applications of loess in architecture. In summary, loess-based functional materials, which are inexpensive and ecologically friendly, deserve more attention and further development.
Geochemistry and Mineralogy of Ice-Dammed Lake Sediments of the Lębork Deposit
- Radosław Rogoziński, Alina Maciejewska
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 01 January 2024, pp. 315-327
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Varved clay deposits from ice-dammed lakes are a particularly important and broadly applied raw material used for the production of high-quality ceramics (red bricks, roof tiles, etc.), but the mineralogy and geochemistry of these sediments are not fully understood. The aim of the present study was to determine the chemical and mineralogical composition of ice-dammed lake sediments of the Lębork deposit. Major-element analysis of the compositions of selected samples from the ice-dammed lake clays was performed by X-ray fluorescence (XRF) and trace elements were determined by inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry. The mineralogical composition of clay samples was determined by X-ray diffraction (XRD). Analyses of the chemical composition of the ice-dammed lake clays of the Lębork deposit showed that the dominant component was SiO2 with a mean content of 56.13 wt.%; the second most abundant component was Al2O3, with a mean content for the entire deposit of 11.61 wt.%. Analysis by ICP-MS indicated the presence of rare earth elements (REE), e.g. cerium, neodymium, lanthanum, and praseodymium; their mean contents are: 56.9, 27.0, 26.3, and 7.3 ppm, respectively. Mineralogical analysis of the varved clays identified quartz, muscovite, calcite, and clay minerals – illite, kaolinite, and montmorillonite. The material filling the Lębork basin is characterized by small lateral and vertical variability in chemical composition. The results of the present study may be of considerable importance in determining the parent igneous, metamorphic, and sedimentary rocks, the weathering products of which supplied material to the ice-dammed lake, as well as in determining the mechanisms and character of the sedimentation process itself.
Effect of Montmorillonite Layer Charge on the Thermal Stability of Bentonite
- Yating Qin, Tongjiang Peng, Hongjuan Sun, Li Zeng, Yao Li, Can Zhou
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- 01 January 2024, pp. 328-338
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The thermal stability of bentonite is vitally important for its application in the casting field and the layer charge of montmorillonite (Qm) is one of its central crystal-chemical parameters. As the main component of bentonite, the influence of Qm on montmorillonite properties and behavior needs to be considered if bentonite is to be used in high-temperature environments. The objective of the current study was to investigate the relationship between Qm and the thermal stability of Chinese bentonite samples collected from Wuhu, Anhui Province (marked as WH); Xinyang, Henan Province (marked as XY); and Santai, Sichuan Province (marked as ST) below. The values of Qm were obtained using the O (11) method, and the structural properties of the bentonite samples were characterized by X-ray diffraction (XRD), Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), thermogravimetry-differential scanning calorimetry (TG-DSC), and field emission scanning electron microscopy (FESEM). The results showed that, in the samples investigated, Qm was inversely related to the thermal stability of bentonite. The Qm value (electrons per half unit cell, e/huc) was greatest for sample ST (0.725 e/huc), followed by sample XY (0.470 e/huc), and by sample WH (0.354 e/huc). The dehydroxylation temperature changed related to Qm; the sample with the largest Qm value was WH (701°C), followed by sample XY (684°C), and sample ST (630°C). After the samples were calcined at 600°C, sample WH had the best montmorillonite structural integrity with the greatest degree of reusability (78.21%); while the montmorillonite structures of samples XY and ST were destroyed, and their reusabilities were only 9.48 and 6.01%, respectively.
Processing and Characterization of Low-Thermal Conductivity, Clay-Based, Ceramic Membranes for Filtering Drinking Water
- Mohamed Mouafon, Gisèle Laure Lecomte-Nana, Nicolas Tessier-Doyen, André Njoya, Dayirou Njoya, Daniel Njopwouo
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 01 January 2024, pp. 339-353
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Drinking-water supply remains a significant challenge in tropical areas; to help meet this challenge, the purpose of the present study was to manufacture low-thermal conductivity ceramic membranes suitable for the retention/removal of particles found in non-potable water. These membranes with significant chemical and mechanical resistances were developed from Cameroonian clays, cassava starch, and bovine bone ash. Up to 30% of Cassava starch and bovine bone ash were added to the membrane as porogens (materials used to make pores in membranes). Membranes were manufactured by uniaxial pressing, drying at 105°C, and sintering at 1150°C for 2 h. The effects of various types of porogen on the thermal behavior, microstructure, flexural strength, porosity, and permeability of ceramic membranes were investigated to determine possible applications of those membranes for water filtration in the tropics. The thermal conductivity of membranes produced without a pore-forming agent (SM0) was greater (0.54 Wm–1K–1) than those produced with starch (SM1 and SM3) (0.45–0.40 Wm–1K–1) or bovine bone ash (SM2) (0.49 Wm–1K–1). The total porosity of SM0s (30.72%) was less than those of starch and bovine bone membranes (37.87–45.99%). The average pore size (0.04 μm) of SM2 membranes was the smallest: SM0 (0.09 μm), SM1 (0.10 μm), and SM3 (0.07 μm). The maximum pore size was 0.37 μm, indicating that membranes contain mesopores and macropores. The flexural strengths of SM1 and SM3 membranes (8.85 and 6.97 MPa, respectively) were less than those of SM2 (10.53 MPa) and SM0 (10.28 MPa), and water permeability from 108 L/h·m2 bar to 2198 L/h·m2 bar. Filtered water properties showed that pH values were upgraded from 5.9 to 7, the turbidity reduction rates and levels were >94% and <0.65 NTU. Particle-size distributions moved from 1150–39,000 nm in polluted water to <2 nm in filtered water. Judging by the sizes of particles present in filtered waters, these membranes may be suitable for elimination of viruses, pigments, proteins, colloids, and bacteria.
Stacking Disorder and Reactivity of Kaolinites
- Bidemi Fashina, Youjun Deng
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- 01 January 2024, pp. 354-365
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Kaolinite is a clay mineral with diverse environmental, industrial, and agricultural applications. The influence of the crystallographic properties of kaolinite, e.g. structural disorder, on these applications is of great interest. Qualitative and quantitative analyses of kaolinite structural disordering over the last 70 years have revealed three main sources of layer-stacking disordering: (1) enantiomorphic stacking; (2) dickite-like stacking; and (3) random shift of layers. What influence do these stacking disorders have on the reactivity of kaolinite? The objective of the present study was to investigate the influence of stacking disorder on the intercalation and dissolution of kaolinite layers. To minimize the effect of particle size on reactivity, the 1–2 μm fractions of five geologic kaolinites were used. The 1–2 μm fractions varied in the degree of structural disorder. The kaolinites were: (1) intercalated with saturated CH3COOK solution at room temperature to examine the effect of stacking disorder on intercalation; and (2) dissolved in 4 M NaOH at 80°C to examine the effect of stacking disorder on kaolinite stability in alkaline solution. Samples with a low degree of stacking disorder intercalated twice as much and dissolved >1.5 times as much as the most disordered sample. The infrared spectrum of the undissolved kaolinite residue in 4 M NaOH showed relative intensities of OH-stretching bands characteristic of a kaolinite-dickite mixture. The binding strength (i.e. resistance to intercalation) of the undissolved residue by NaOH was high; the residue could not be intercalated by CH3COOK. Differences in the average interlayer binding strength were attributed to the greater proportions of dickite-like sequences in highly disordered kaolinite compared to ordered kaolinite specimens. These results suggested that the binding strength of kaolinite layers is proportional to the degree of stacking disorder. Dickite-like sequences, a type of stacking defect, contributed to the lower reactivity of highly disordered kaolinite.
New Insight into the Relationships Between Structural and Ftir Spectroscopic Features of Kaolinites
- Victor A. Drits, Bella B. Zviagina, Boris A. Sakharov, Olga V. Dorzhieva, Aleksandr T. Savichev
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- 01 January 2024, pp. 366-388
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To resolve the existing ambiguities in the interpretation of the OH-stretching vibrations of kaolinites, relationships were, for the first time, established between the structural and Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopic features for a set of kaolinite samples which differed in terms of their relative amounts of coexisting high- and low-ordered phases. For this purpose, a representative collection of kaolinites differing in origin, particle size, and degree of disorder was studied by powder X-ray diffraction (XRD) and FTIR spectroscopy. Modeling of the experimental XRD patterns based on the orthogonal layer unit cell having a mirror plane showed each sample to be a mixture of nearly defect-free high-ordered (HOK) and low-ordered (LOK) kaolinite phases, with HOK varying from 86 to 4%. The wavenumbers, heights, areas, and full widths at half-maximum (FWHM) were determined for the OH-stretching bands at ~3697 (ν1), ~3670 (ν2), ~3652 (ν3), and 3620 cm–1 (ν4) by decomposition and fitting of the FTIR spectra. The FWHM(ν1)/FWHM(ν4) and FWHM(ν3)/FWHM(ν2) values were related linearly to the HOK content, which may be associated with the in-phase and out-of-phase character of the corresponding pairs of vibrations, respectively. A novel interpretation was suggested for the variations in the relative integrated intensities of the OH bands with the amount of the HOK phase. The intensity distribution of the ν2 and ν3 bands is controlled by the triclinic structure symmetry in the defect-free kaolinite and the mirror symmetry of the layers in low-ordered structures, in agreement with the observed evolution of the corresponding band intensities. The ν1 and ν2 band positions for the low-ordered samples are within the wavenumber range for the high-ordered samples. In contrast, the ν3 and ν4 band positions for the low-ordered samples are shifted toward higher wavenumbers, indicating that some of the low-ordered kaolinites should contain dickite-like structural fragments distributed among kaolinite layers.
One-Pot Synthesis of Sulfonated Carbon/Palygorskite Solid-Acid Catalyst for the Esterification of Oleic Acid with Methanol
- Jiadong Zhang, Wenbin Jiang, Jinlong Jiang, Mei Wu, Yingying Shi, Ping Mao, Qiulin Deng
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 01 January 2024, pp. 389-396
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Sulfonated carbon is a ‘green,’ solid-acid catalyst. For applications purposes, its surface area needs to be improved and its preparation needs to be made environmentally friendly. The objective of the present study was to provide a green and economical method of preparing a sulfonated carbon catalyst by using palygorskite (Plg) fiber as a support for sulfonated carbon. Sulfonated carbon/palygorskite solid-acid catalyst (SC-Plg) was synthesized via one-step carbonization-sulfonation by mixing palygorskite with sucrose as the carbon source and p-toluenesulfonic acid as the sulfonating agent. The catalyst was characterized by SEM, EDX, TEM, FTIR, and nitrogen adsorption-desorption isotherms. The results indicated that sucrose-derived carbon was loaded uniformly on the surface of Plg fibers and formed the SC-Plg catalyst. The inexpensive Plg fibers could replace sucrose-derived carbon and increase the surface area of the resulting catalyst. The SC-Plg shows significant catalytic performance and excellent stability when used in the esterification of oleic acid with methanol. The conversion of oleic acid reached 68.09%, even after five cycles. This work paves the way for the development of highly active, carbon-based, solid-acid composite catalysts using a natural Plg nanofiber template.
In Memoriam: David Pevear
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 01 January 2024, pp. 397-398
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