Patent Application: US-201214238146-A

Abstract:
a method for the preparation of zeolites from non - fused fly ash includes the steps of preparing an aqueous alkali hydroxyl solution and mixing the solution with the non - fused fly ash to create an aqueous alkali hydroxyl fly ash mixture , subjecting the mixture to ultrasonication and recovering the zeolites . the method may include the step of centrifuging the aqueous alkali hydroxyl fly ash mixture and washing the solid synthetic products .

Description:
a sample of class f fly ash was collected from one of south african &# 39 ; s power plants . this fly ash had the typical mineralogical and chemical composition of a class f fly ash . an omni sonic ruptor 400 ultrasonic homogenizer ( 400 watt maximum power , 20 khz system ) was used . the instrument has the capability of processing samples ranging from 025 to 1000 ml . it is important to highlight that the instrument has the following features : variable power supply , auto - tuning for optimal processing efficiency , power - emitted display for accuracy and repeatability , 0 - 15 minute timer , tips compatible with most 20 khz systems , and pulse mode for sensitive samples . 100 ml of predetermined concentrations of naoh were prepared for each experiment were mixed with 20 g of fly ash in a 100 ml graduated plastic beaker . the sample was placed on the sample platform of the omni sonic ruptor 400 ultrasonic homogenizer and approximately 3 cm of the standard processing tip was inserted in the solution . thereafter , the power was adjusted to 100 % and the pulse control was set to read 100 % in order to limit temperature raise since the power was set to the maximum . the sonication was conducted at ambient conditions , i . e . sea level pressure and a temperature range of from 18 to 25 deg c . during the investigation of the effect of naoh concentration , four concentrations ( 1m , 3m , 4m and 7m ) were studied by fixing the sonication time to 10 minutes . effect of sonication time was investigated by fixing naoh concentration at 5m and the sonication time was varied as follows ; 5 , 10 , 15 and 30 minutes . in order to study the effect of fly ash particle size ( 90 μm , 150 μm and 212 μm ), 5m naoh and 10 minutes sonication time were fixed . the effect of stirring the fly ash - naoh mixture was investigated by fixing naoh concentration at 5m and sonicating it for 10 minutes . it is important to highlight that stirring and sonication were done simultaneously . instead of placing the sample on the instrument &# 39 ; s sample platform , the sample was placed on a magnetic stirrer and a magnetic stirring rod was dropped in the slurry . after each synthesis , the resulting slurry was centrifuged and filtered using 0 . 2 - μm membrane filters in order to remove any remainder of the undissolved fly ash in the supernatant solutions while allowing soluble silicates of monomeric , oligomeric and up to colloidal size polysilicates to pass through . this study did not differentiate the speciation of soluble silicates in the supernatant solutions . the solid synthetic products were later washed with ultra pure water to remove loosely - bound surface alkalis . thereafter the solids were dried in an oven at 90 deg c . (° c .) to reduce adsorbed moisture from the samples which interferes with the sensitivity of the analysis . starting fly ash and resulting synthesis products were characterised using x - ray diffraction spectrometer ( xrd ), x - ray fluorescence spectrometer ( xrd ), fourier transform infra - red spectrometer ( ftir ) scanning electron microscope and the surface area was determined using the gravimetric nitrogen brunauer - emmett - teller ( n2 - bet ) technique . inductively - coupled plasma equipped with optical emission spectroscopy ( icp - oes ) was used to determine the concentration of si , and al . effect of ultrasound on dissolution behaviour of si and al from fly ash as shown in fig1 , it was found that the concentration of the most important elements ( si and al ) increased when the concentration of naoh was increased although at higher concentrations the values were noted to decrease slightly . as presented in fig1 , after sonication of the as - received fly ash for 10 minutes the concentration of si in solution was seen to rapidly increase from 35 mg / l when 1 m naoh was used up to 3331 mg / l when 4 m naoh was used . upon the use of 7 m naoh , the si concentration was found to be 3432 mg / l which was only a slight increase compared to the use of 5m naoh . a similar trend was also observed for the case of dissolution of al since as it was seen to rapidly increase from 64 mg / l ( 1 m naoh ) to 1674 mg / l ( 4 m naoh ) with a decrease to 1466 mg / l when 7 m naoh was used . the dissolution of si and al from the as - received fly ash was found to be directly dependent on the naoh concentration between 1 and 4 m when a fixed sonication time was applied . the concentration of the si dissolved from fly ash was found to be higher than that of al , as expected , since the content of sio 2 in the fly ash is normally higher than that of al 2 o 3 . the effect of sonication time on release of si and al from fly ash upon sonication is shown in fig2 . from the results presented in fig2 , the concentration of si was increased from 358 mg / l when the as - received south african class f fly ash was sonicated for 5 minutes to 1385 mg / l after 10 minutes of sonication . a decline in the si concentration ( 547 mg / l ) was observed occur after 15 minutes of sonication which was followed by a very rapid increase up to 9708 mg / l after 30 of sonication . a similar trend was also observed in the al concentration which was 218 mg / l after 5 minutes sonication and increased to 2890 mg / l after sonication for 30 minutes with a similar concentration decrease ( 320 mg / l ) after 15 minutes of sonication . previous studies by luque de castro and priego - capote ( 2007b ) pointed out that ultrasound irradiation of solid particles suspended in a liquid phase enhances their dissolution mainly due to the induced mechanical effects . the mechanical disaggregation and breakdown of fly ash particles as well as the glassy amorphous materials phase resulted in enhanced dissolution . it was expected that the stirring during sonication could enhance dissolution of the fly ash mineral phases but it turned out to be the opposite ( fig3 ). from the results presented in fig3 , sonication of fly ash for 10 minutes without the additional magnetic stirring led to dissolution ( 358 mg / l of si and 218 mg / l of al ) but with the additional stirring , the si concentration was observed to decrease to 250 mg / l whereas that of al decreased to 162 mg / l . a similar trend was also observed when the fly ash - naoh slurry was sonicated for 10 minutes . this decrease in the dissolution of si and al upon additional magnetic stirring could be due to the interruption of the microstreaming and microjetting effects which are thought to be the main contributors of the mechanical effects affecting dissolution of fly ash . previous studies have pointed out that ultrasound irradiation on solid particles suspended in a liquid phase enhanced their dissolution mainly due to the induced mechanical effects . the cavitation mechanism at or near particle surface leads to the generation of a liquid jet that results to collisions of particles inducing shearing to form smooth or pitted particle surfaces with a decreased size . the generated liquid jet can either be through microjetting and microstreaming . both microstreaming and microjetting effects contribute to mechanical disaggregation of aggregated particles which results in the dispersion of loosely held clusters and hence enhances dissolution . the dissolution of si and al from fly ash was found to increase with the decrease of fly ash particle size ( fig4 ). from the results presented in fig4 , the concentration of si obtained from sonicating fly ash having 90 μm , 150 μm and 212 μm particle sizes was found to be 2985 mg / l , 2073 mg / l and 1933 mg / l respectively while that for al was 2985 mg / l , 2073 mg / l and 1933 mg / l respectively . the trend shows that the concentration of si and al decreased with the increase of fly ash particle size which was understandable since the smaller fly ash particles had earlier been reported to contain less quartz ( muriithi et al ., 2011 ) and dissolved much easier upon sonication . the high surface area of the smallest particles is also thought to have enhanced the mechanical effects emanating from the cavitation phenomenon of ultrasonication as expected . the sem images of raw and sonicated fly ash are presented in fig2 - 9 and 12 . as expected , the fly ash particles were spherical and smooth due to the amorphous glassy phase ( fig5 ). when the fly ash was sonicated for 5 to 15 minutes , the particles lost their smooth surface and became uneven due to the mechanical effects ( shear forces , jet and shock waves ) induced by the cavitation process which result in rapid mass transfer , surface cleaning and particle size reduction ( fig5 - 8 ). sonicating the fly ash for 30 minutes ( fig9 ) led to the formation of secondary crystals which were identified to be an almost pure hydroxy - cancrinite zeolite phase . when the already sonicated ( 30 minutes ) south african class f fly ash was further subjected to hydrothermal treatment at 140 ° c . for 48 hours , zeolite p and amorphous material that had been identified from the xrd pattern presented in fig1 were also observed in the sem image in fig1 . this zeolitic transformation is thought to be due to the ostwald &# 39 ; s step rule on the law of successive phase transformations ( byrappa and yoshimura , 2001 ). the exact mechanism for zeolite sonocrystallisation is not yet properly understood but the extreme conditions inside the medium brought about by the cavitation phenomenon has been reported to accelerate nucleation and crystallization rates . the increase in the degree of supersaturation achieved upon the application of ultrasound has been proposed to trigger the formation of germ nuclei that are distributed through the solution by the collapse of the bubble which nuclei grow to form the crystalline material by incorporation of the building block silicate species generated during the dissolution step . xrd analysis results for experiments conducted to investigate the effect of sonication time are presented in fig1 . the samples obtained were subjected to a complete set of characterization techniques that is normally conducted for samples generated through the other well - known synthetic routes . as shown in fig1 , sonicating fly ash for 5 , 10 and 15 minutes resulted in production of a mixture of hydroxyl cancrinite and hydroxyl sodafite zeolite phases . when sonication was extended to 30 minutes , an almost pure hydroxyl cancrinite zeolite phase was obtained . fig1 compares the product obtained after hydrothermal treatment of the already sonicated fly ash ( 30 minutes ) with that only sonicated for 30 minutes . it was interesting to note that further hydrothermal treatment of the sonicated fly ash slurry resulted in the formation of another zeolite phase ( zeolite na - p1 ) which in this case could be referred to as a contaminant because the hydroxyl cancrinite zeolite obtained by sonicating fly ash for 30 minutes was almost in its pure form . amorphous material was also identified by the ‘ hump ’ in the xrd diffraction pattern appearing between 20 - 40 ′ 2θ . cancrinite zeolites belong to the abc family of zeolites of which sodalite , chabazite , and offretite are also members . cancrinite has one - dimensional , 12 - membered ring pores that are about 5 . 9 å in diameter ( see fig1 and 14 ). a mixture containing sodalite and / or cancrinite cages in which salts are encapsulated have been shown to possess a wide range of applications which in most cases depend on the nature of the salts encapsulated . cancrinite zeolites can be used as a source of soil nutrients for instance by slowly releasing phosphates and nitrates during weathering . they can also be used to release oxygen gently to the soil if the trapped salts are perchlorates , chlorates or chromates . they can also serve as single or dual function catalysts such as in hydrogenation - dehydrogenation catalysis where the encapsulated salts are those of the group vib metals , converted to their oxide form . there is a lack of studies on further applications of cancrinites due to the problems of the preparation of large amounts of its pure - phase hence the newly developed method could excite more interest in this direction . ftir analysis is a well known complementing characterisation technique that enables the monitoring of evolution of crystallinity during zeolite synthesis and also provides information about molecular structure . fig1 shows the ftir spectrum of arnot fly ash and compares it with the spectra generated when the same non - fused fly ash was sonicated at different times using the omni sonic ruptor 400 ultrasonic homogenizer . the spectrum for the raw fly ash ( arnot ) presented in fig1 showed the expected three wide bands characteristic of aluminosilicates : the band at 460 cm − 1 ( t - o bending vibrations ), bands at around 704 , 780 and 800 cm − 1 ( t - o symmetric stretching vibrations , where t is either al , si ) and band at 1053 cm − 1 ( t - o asymmetric stretching vibrations ). the band at around 950 cm − 1 was associated with the presence of a glassy phase while the bands found at 550 , 560 , and 700 cm − 1 are reported to be due to the mullite phase in the fly ash . the ftir spectra of the sonicated alkaline activated fly ash samples show interesting differences when compared with the spectrum of fly ash . the bands in the region of 400 - 420 cm − 1 are related to the pore opening or motion of the tetrahedral rings , which form the pore opening of zeolites while the bands in the region of 420 - 500 cm − 1 are attributed to internal tetrahedron vibrations of si — o and al — o of the zeolitic materials . the band at around 1053 cm − 1 in the original fly ash became the sharpest when the fly ash was sonicated for 30 minutes meaning that most of the fly ash amorphous glassy phase had been converted to zeolites . comparing the mid - infrared vibrational bands of the ultrasonic assisted synthesis products obtained after 30 minutes sonication of the as - received south african class f fly ash with that obtained after the same sample was further subjected to hydrothermal treatment at 140 ° c . for 48 hours , the partial transformation of hydroxy - cancrinite to zeolite p is evident from the significant shift of the peak appearing at 938 cm − 1 . this shift is due to the differences of the si / al ratio between zeolite p and cancrinite zeolite . the shift caused by differences in si / al ratio has also been affirmed by flanigen ( 1971 ) in the case where dealumination of zeolites was conducted . though there are some noticeable differences in the intensity of the peaks in the spectra for the single phase hydroxy - cancrinite with that of the mixture of hydroxy - cancrinite with zeolite p and amorphous material , it is important to point out that the joint presence of t - o vibrations ( t = al , si ) in both samples yields overlapping spectral bands that make interpretation difficult . this challenge was also affirmed by fernandez - jimenez and palomo ( 2005 ). brunauer - emmett - teller ( n 2 - bet ) analysis is an important physical characterisation tool that is used to understand the surface area , micro - pore area and micro - pore volume of the synthesised product . table 1 presents the surface area , micro - pore area and micro - pore volume results obtained when non - fused arnot fly was sonicated at different times . from table 1 , it can be seen that there was a significant increase in the product &# 39 ; s surface area as the sonication time was increased . the growth of the zeolitic crystals as shown in the sem images and confirmed by the xrd analysis was attributed to the increase of the surface area due to the porosity of zeolites compared to the fly ash . the nitrogen adsorption / desorption isotherms are shown in fig1 . the nitrogen adsorption / desorption isotherm did not have the expected type 1 isotherm known for the microporosity property . the bet surface area was also noted to be lower than expected . the reason could be due to the channel dimensions of hydroxyl cancrinite which are occupied by na and other charge balancing cations hence limiting the adsorption of nitrogen inside the pores . the observed hysteresis loop revealed some intragranular mesoporosity of the zeolite . aki , i . and ari , v . 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