Cargando…

Changes in Porous Parameters of the Ion Exchanged X Zeolite and Their Effect on CO(2) Adsorption

Zeolite 13X (NaX) was modified through ion-exchange with alkali and alkaline earth metal cations. The degree of ion exchange was thoroughly characterized with ICP, EDS and XRF methods. The new method of EDS data evaluation for zeolites was presented. It delivers the same reliable results as more com...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Gęsikiewicz-Puchalska, Andżelika, Zgrzebnicki, Michal, Michalkiewicz, Beata, Kałamaga, Agnieszka, Narkiewicz, Urszula, Morawski, Antoni W., Wrobel, Rafal
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8707879/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34946601
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26247520
_version_ 1784622546121916416
author Gęsikiewicz-Puchalska, Andżelika
Zgrzebnicki, Michal
Michalkiewicz, Beata
Kałamaga, Agnieszka
Narkiewicz, Urszula
Morawski, Antoni W.
Wrobel, Rafal
author_facet Gęsikiewicz-Puchalska, Andżelika
Zgrzebnicki, Michal
Michalkiewicz, Beata
Kałamaga, Agnieszka
Narkiewicz, Urszula
Morawski, Antoni W.
Wrobel, Rafal
author_sort Gęsikiewicz-Puchalska, Andżelika
collection PubMed
description Zeolite 13X (NaX) was modified through ion-exchange with alkali and alkaline earth metal cations. The degree of ion exchange was thoroughly characterized with ICP, EDS and XRF methods. The new method of EDS data evaluation for zeolites was presented. It delivers the same reliable results as more complicated, expensive, time consuming and hazardous ICP approach. The highest adsorption capacities at 273 K and 0.95 bar were achieved for materials containing the alkali metals in the following order K < Na < Li, respectively, 4.54, 5.55 and 5.94 mmol/g. It was found that it is associated with the porous parameters of the ion-exchanged samples. The Li(0.61)Na(0.39)X form of zeolite exhibited the highest specific surface area of 624 m(2)/g and micropore volume of 0.35 cm(3)/g compared to sodium form 569 m(2)/g and 0.30 cm(3)/g, respectively. The increase of CO(2) uptake is not related with deterioration of CO(2) selectivity. At room temperature, the CO(2) vs. N(2) selectivity remains at a very high stable level prior and after ion exchange in co-adsorption process (X(CO2) during adsorption 0.15; X(CO2) during desorption 0.95) within measurement uncertainty. Additionally, the Li(0.61)Na(0.39)X sample was proven to be stable in the aging adsorption-desorption tests (200 sorption-desorption cycles; circa 11 days of continuous process) exhibiting the CO(2) uptake decrease of about 6%. The exchange with alkaline earth metals (Mg, Ca) led to a significant decrease of SSA and micropore volume which correlated with lower CO(2) adsorption capacities. Interestingly, the divalent cations cause formation of mesopores, due to the relaxation of lattice strains.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8707879
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-87078792021-12-25 Changes in Porous Parameters of the Ion Exchanged X Zeolite and Their Effect on CO(2) Adsorption Gęsikiewicz-Puchalska, Andżelika Zgrzebnicki, Michal Michalkiewicz, Beata Kałamaga, Agnieszka Narkiewicz, Urszula Morawski, Antoni W. Wrobel, Rafal Molecules Article Zeolite 13X (NaX) was modified through ion-exchange with alkali and alkaline earth metal cations. The degree of ion exchange was thoroughly characterized with ICP, EDS and XRF methods. The new method of EDS data evaluation for zeolites was presented. It delivers the same reliable results as more complicated, expensive, time consuming and hazardous ICP approach. The highest adsorption capacities at 273 K and 0.95 bar were achieved for materials containing the alkali metals in the following order K < Na < Li, respectively, 4.54, 5.55 and 5.94 mmol/g. It was found that it is associated with the porous parameters of the ion-exchanged samples. The Li(0.61)Na(0.39)X form of zeolite exhibited the highest specific surface area of 624 m(2)/g and micropore volume of 0.35 cm(3)/g compared to sodium form 569 m(2)/g and 0.30 cm(3)/g, respectively. The increase of CO(2) uptake is not related with deterioration of CO(2) selectivity. At room temperature, the CO(2) vs. N(2) selectivity remains at a very high stable level prior and after ion exchange in co-adsorption process (X(CO2) during adsorption 0.15; X(CO2) during desorption 0.95) within measurement uncertainty. Additionally, the Li(0.61)Na(0.39)X sample was proven to be stable in the aging adsorption-desorption tests (200 sorption-desorption cycles; circa 11 days of continuous process) exhibiting the CO(2) uptake decrease of about 6%. The exchange with alkaline earth metals (Mg, Ca) led to a significant decrease of SSA and micropore volume which correlated with lower CO(2) adsorption capacities. Interestingly, the divalent cations cause formation of mesopores, due to the relaxation of lattice strains. MDPI 2021-12-11 /pmc/articles/PMC8707879/ /pubmed/34946601 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26247520 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Gęsikiewicz-Puchalska, Andżelika
Zgrzebnicki, Michal
Michalkiewicz, Beata
Kałamaga, Agnieszka
Narkiewicz, Urszula
Morawski, Antoni W.
Wrobel, Rafal
Changes in Porous Parameters of the Ion Exchanged X Zeolite and Their Effect on CO(2) Adsorption
title Changes in Porous Parameters of the Ion Exchanged X Zeolite and Their Effect on CO(2) Adsorption
title_full Changes in Porous Parameters of the Ion Exchanged X Zeolite and Their Effect on CO(2) Adsorption
title_fullStr Changes in Porous Parameters of the Ion Exchanged X Zeolite and Their Effect on CO(2) Adsorption
title_full_unstemmed Changes in Porous Parameters of the Ion Exchanged X Zeolite and Their Effect on CO(2) Adsorption
title_short Changes in Porous Parameters of the Ion Exchanged X Zeolite and Their Effect on CO(2) Adsorption
title_sort changes in porous parameters of the ion exchanged x zeolite and their effect on co(2) adsorption
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8707879/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34946601
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26247520
work_keys_str_mv AT gesikiewiczpuchalskaandzelika changesinporousparametersoftheionexchangedxzeoliteandtheireffectonco2adsorption
AT zgrzebnickimichal changesinporousparametersoftheionexchangedxzeoliteandtheireffectonco2adsorption
AT michalkiewiczbeata changesinporousparametersoftheionexchangedxzeoliteandtheireffectonco2adsorption
AT kałamagaagnieszka changesinporousparametersoftheionexchangedxzeoliteandtheireffectonco2adsorption
AT narkiewiczurszula changesinporousparametersoftheionexchangedxzeoliteandtheireffectonco2adsorption
AT morawskiantoniw changesinporousparametersoftheionexchangedxzeoliteandtheireffectonco2adsorption
AT wrobelrafal changesinporousparametersoftheionexchangedxzeoliteandtheireffectonco2adsorption