화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Colloid and Interface Science, Vol.330, No.1, 97-104, 2009
Effect of vacuum and of strong adsorbed water films on micropore formation in aluminum hydroxide xerogel powders
Aluminum hydroxide gels were washed with water, ethanol, methanol and isopropanol to obtain new gels with different liquid phases that were dried either in air at 120 degrees C or under vacuum at 80 degrees C. Drying in air leads to alcoholic xerogels with BET surface areas larger than the aqueous ones. The effect of the alcoholic groups as substitutes of the hydroxyl ones has been discussed to account for the final size of xerogel crystallites. Drying under vacuum decreases the BET surface of the methanol xerogels, but no micropores are formed in all the alcoholic xerogel matrixes. On the contrary, the vacuum drying process changes significantly the microstructure of the aqueous xerogels. Their BET surface increases by 34 m(2)/g, and micropores are formed within their crystallite aggregates. It has been experimentally shown that these changes are clue to a shear transformation that occurs in the boehmite xerogels obtained under vacuum. To discuss these data, the existence of chemical Compounds SLICK as AIOOH center dot nH(2)O was postulated. On this ground, a neat analogy between vacuum drying process and vacuum interfacial decomposition reactions of inorganic salts can be drawn. This analogy explains how a state of stresses forms in aqueous xerogel matrix during vacuum drying process. (C) 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.