Grazing incidence x-ray diffraction analysis of zeolite NaA membranes on porous alumina tubes.

Anal Sci

Bussan Nanotech Research Institute Inc., Mitsui & Co. Ltd., Nanotech Park, 2-1 Koyadai, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-0074, Japan.

Published: July 2006

AI Article Synopsis

  • Zeolite NaA-type membranes were synthesized on porous alumina tubes for dehydration, characterized using grazing incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXRD) to analyze their structure.
  • The surface layer of these membranes was around 2-3 micrometers thick, which was confirmed through transmission electron microscopy with a focused ion beam technique.
  • The study also compared GIXRD patterns and features of NaA-type membranes with CaA-type and surface-damaged versions, finding that the former had detectable diffraction patterns while the latter showed broad, less defined patterns, suggesting a higher concentration of zeolite crystals embedded in the porous alumina than on the surface.

Article Abstract

Zeolite NaA-type membranes hydrothermally synthesized on porous alumina tubes, for dehydration process, were characterized by grazing incidence 2 theta scan X-ray diffraction analysis (GIXRD). The fine structure of the membrane was studied fractionally for surface layer and for materials embedded in the porous alumina tube. The thickness of the surface layer on the porous alumina tube in the membranes used in this study was approximately 2-3 microm as determined from transmission electron microscopy with focused ion beam thin-layer specimen preparation technique (FIB-TEM). To discuss the effects of the membrane surface morphology on the GIXRD measurements, CaA-type membrane prepared by ion exchange from the NaA-type membrane and surface-damaged NaA-type membrane prepared by water leaching were also studied. For the original NaA-type membrane, 2 theta scan GIXRD patterns could be clearly measured at X-ray incidence angles (alpha) ranging from 0.1 to 2.0 deg in increments of 0.1 deg. The surface layers of the 2 - 3 microm on the porous alumina tube correspond to the alpha values up to ca. 0.2 deg. For the CaA-type and the surface-damaged NaA-type membranes, however, diffraction patterns from the surface layer could not be successfully detected and the others were somewhat broad. For all the three samples, diffraction intensities of both zeolite and alumina increased with depth (X-ray incidence angle, alpha) in the porous alumina tube region. The depth profile analysis of the membranes based on the GIXRD first revealed that amount of zeolite crystal embedded in the porous alumina tube is much larger than that in the surface layer. Thus, the 2 theta scan GIXRD is a useful method to study zeolite crystal growth mechanism around (both inside and outside) the porous alumina support during hydrothermal synthesis and to study water permeation behavior in the dehydration process.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.2116/analsci.22.961DOI Listing

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