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Cyclic carbonate-sodium smectite intercalates

Version 2 2024-06-04, 08:39
Version 1 2016-06-23, 09:01
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 08:39 authored by Will GatesWill Gates, U Shaheen, TW Turney, AF Patti
Five-membered cyclic organic carbonates (COC) are of interest for their ability to modify the surface properties of smectites and enhance the hydraulic resistance of bentonites to saline leachates. The mechanism of interaction of glycerol carbonate (GC) and several other hydroxyl containing cyclic organic carbonates (generally having progressively greater molecular masses) with sodium montmorillonite (Na+-Mt) was studied using powder X-ray diffraction and infrared spectroscopy. The 001 reflection for GC/Na+-Mt intercalates varied with the amount COC added, and the measured d001 value increased from 1.29 nm to as large as 2.22 nm at equal-mass coverage of the COC to Na+-Mt. In general, when intercalated, the cyclic carbonyl (Cdouble bond; length as m-dashO) stretch and the fundamental hydroxyl (O–H) stretch bands of COC derivatives were red-shifted with respect to these bands for neat COC, indicating strong ion-dipole interaction of the carbonyl group with interlayer Na+, and H-bonding of the OH group with both interlayer water and Mt surfaces. A stable and highly ordered intercalate was produced at a 1:1 mass loading with Mt in which about 6 GC molecules per unit cell (~ 7 molecules per Na+ ion) replaced most of the interlayer water.

History

Journal

Applied Clay Science

Volume

124-125

Pagination

94-101

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

ISSN

0169-1317

eISSN

1872-9053

Language

English

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

© 2016 Published by Elsevier B.V.

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV