Journal Article10.1038/359710A0
Ordered mesoporous molecular sieves synthesized by a liquid-crystal template mechanism
16K
TL;DR: In this paper, the synthesis of mesoporous inorganic solids from calcination of aluminosilicate gels in the presence of surfactants is described, in which the silicate material forms inorganic walls between ordered surfactant micelles.
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Abstract: MICROPOROUS and mesoporous inorganic solids (with pore diameters of ≤20 A and ∼20–500 A respectively)1 have found great utility as catalysts and sorption media because of their large internal surface area. Typical microporous materials are the crystalline framework solids, such as zeolites2, but the largest pore dimensions found so far are ∼10–12 A for some metallophosphates3–5 and ∼14 A for the mineral cacoxenite6. Examples of mesoporous solids include silicas7 and modified layered materials8–11, but these are invariably amorphous or paracrystalline, with pores that are irregularly spaced and broadly distributed in size8,12. Pore size can be controlled by intercalation of layered silicates with a surfactant species9,13, but the final product retains, in part, the layered nature of the precursor material. Here we report the synthesis of mesoporous solids from the calcination of aluminosilicate gels in the presence of surfactants. The material14,15 possesses regular arrays of uniform channels, the dimensions of which can be tailored (in the range 16 A to 100 A or more) through the choice of surfactant, auxiliary chemicals and reaction conditions. We propose that the formation of these materials takes place by means of a liquid-crystal 'templating' mechanism, in which the silicate material forms inorganic walls between ordered surfactant micelles.
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Citations
Nanocrystallised titania and zirconia mesoporous thin films exhibiting enhanced thermal stability
TL;DR: Tuned chemical conditions complemented with a set of treatments have been developed to enhance the thermal stability of transition metal oxide mesoporous thin films (up to 500 °C for TiO2 and 450 õC for ZrO2), allowing the formation of crack-free coatings presenting excellent optical quality.
169
Oriented Mesoporous Organosilicate Thin Films
Erik M. Freer,Leslie E. Krupp,William D. Hinsberg,Philip M. Rice,James L. Hedrick,Jennifer N. Cha,Robert D. Miller,Ho-Cheol Kim +7 more
TL;DR: This work reports a simple path to control the morphology, scaling, and orientation of ordered mesopores in organosilicate thin films through the coassembly of a diblock copolymer, poly(styrene-b-ethylene oxide) (PS-b,PEO), and an oligomeric organosILicate precursor that is selectively miscible with PEO.
168
Support effects on Brønsted acid site densities and alcohol dehydration turnover rates on tungsten oxide domains
TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of support identity on catalytic 2-butanol dehydration rates, Bronsted acid site density, and reducibility are examined for WOx domains supported on ZrO2, Al2O3, SiO2 (MCM41), and SnO2 supports.
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168
Sensitivity properties of a novel NO2 gas sensor based on mesoporous WO3 thin film
TL;DR: In this article, a mesoporous WO3 thin film micro-gas sensor was fabricated and the NO2 gas-sensing as well as electrical properties have been investigated.
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References
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The preparation of alkyltrimethylammonium-kanemite complexes and their conversion to microporous materials.
TL;DR: In this article, single layered polysilicate kanemite (NaHSi2O5·3H2O) was allowed to react with alkyltrimethylammonium chloride solutions to form Alkyl-TRIMethylammium-kanemite complexes.
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