Abstract
Halloysite is one of the nanoscale tubular minerals in nature. This article reports the mineralogical character, dispersion treatment, structural, and morphological stabilities of a 10Å-type halloysite mineral from Hunan, China. X-ray diffraction (XRD), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), particle-size distribution and N2 adsorption–desorption isotherms were adopted to characterize the raw and calcined minerals. Ammonium lauryl sulfate was used as the surfactant to obtain mono-dispersed halloysite nanotubes.The raw mineral is a kind of tubular nanotube with a hollow interior channel, the specific surface area is 56.7m2/g. Alunitization occurred in the impure mineral. Thermal treatment to the mineral induced shrinkage of the c-axis and yielded a 7Å-type structure. The tube wall was transformed to an amorphous structure in the dehydration process at 450°C. Phase segregation occurred to yield amorphous SiO2 and γ-Al2O3 at around 1000°C. The tubular morphology can be maintained even after it is calcined at 1100°C for 6h, and the specific surface area is enlarged slightly to 65.7m2/g. While after being calcined to 1300°C, the mineral will generate mullite and silica, accompanied with collapse of the tubular walls. A schematic diagram is proposed to illustrate the structural transformation procedure. The results provide assurance to the use of halloysite in high temperature circumstances, such as three-way catalysts.
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