0000000000282965

AUTHOR

Anna M. Lind

0000-0001-8106-0520

showing 2 related works from this author

Pore structural characteristics, size exclusion properties and column performance of two mesoporous amorphous silicas and their pseudomorphically tra…

2007

Highly ordered mesoporous silicas such as, mobile composition of matter, MCM-41, MCM-48, and the SBA-types of materials have helped to a large extent to understand the formation mechanisms of the pore structure of adsorbents and to improve the methods of pore structural characterization. It still remains an open question whether the high order, the regularity of the pore system, and the narrow pore size distribution of the materials will lead to a substantial benefit when these materials are employed in liquid phase separation processes. MCM-41 type 10 microm beads are synthesized following the route of pseudomorphic transformation of highly porous amorphous silicas. Highly porous silicas a…

Materials scienceSilica gelSize-exclusion chromatographyAnalytical chemistryFiltration and SeparationPercolation threshold[CHIM.MATE]Chemical Sciences/Material chemistry010501 environmental sciences010402 general chemistryMolecular sieve01 natural sciences0104 chemical sciencesAnalytical ChemistryAmorphous solidchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryMCM-41Mesoporous materialPorosity0105 earth and related environmental sciencesJournal of Separation Science
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Spherical silica agglomerates possessing hierarchical porosity prepared by spray drying of MCM-41 and MCM-48 nanospheres

2003

Hierarchically ordered porous materials possessing both meso- and macropores can be obtained by agglomeration of spherical primary particles of mesoporous MCM-41 and MCM-48 materials using the spray drying technique. A highly interconnected bimodal pore network is obtained due to the intra- and inter-particle pore systems within the micron-sized spherical agglomerates. Further packing of the agglomerates will result in a three-modal hierarchical pore system, where the first level of porosity originates from the ordered mesopores inside the primary particles, the second level is a result of the particle internal porosity, and the third level is due to the voids between the agglomerates. The …

Materials scienceScanning electron microscopeSmall-angle X-ray scatteringMineralogyGeneral ChemistryPorosimetryCondensed Matter PhysicsChemical engineeringMechanics of MaterialsTransmission electron microscopySpray dryingParticleGeneral Materials SciencePorosityMesoporous materialMicroporous and Mesoporous Materials
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