An industrial ceramic nanofiltration membrane (pore size 0.9 nm) was tested in a Canadian oil field for more than 12,500 h to treat wastewater directly from daily operations, without any type of pre-treatment. This wastewater contained a high content of total suspended solids (13 to 510 mg/kg), and total organic carbon (31 to 134 mg/kg).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCarbon membranes have great potential for highly selective and cost-efficient gas separation. Carbon is chemically stable and it is relative cheap. The controlled carbonization of a polymer coating on a porous ceramic support provides a 3D carbon material with molecular sieving permeation performance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSuperparamagnetic Ni nanoparticles with diameters of about 3 nm are formed in situ at room temperature in a polysilazane matrix, forming Ni/polysilazane nanocomposite, in the reaction between a polysilazane and trans-bis(aceto-kO)bis(2-aminoethanol-k(2)N,O)nickel(II). The thermolysis of the Ni/polysilazane nanocomposite at 700 °C in an argon atmosphere results in a microporous superparamagnetic Ni/silicon oxycarbonitride (Ni/SiCNO) ceramic nanocomposite. The growth of Ni nanoparticles in Ni/SiCNO ceramic nanocomposite is totally suppressed even after thermolysis at 700 °C, as confirmed by HRTEM and SQUID characterizations.
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