Abstract

Swelling of layered zeolite precursors such as MCM-22P with cationic surfactants at high pH is the key step in their subsequent conversion into expanded lamellar materials by pillaring and delamination. Increasing Al content in the precursors can yield more active catalysts but affects their swelling efficiency especially at lower temperature, which was reported as favorable for layer structure preservation with more siliceous MCM-22P. The latter, a (multi)layered precursor, was investigated in this work and showed inadequate swelling of its high-Al representatives with organic hydroxide/surfactant mixtures and especially when NaOH is the source of high pH. In contrast, the unilamellar MCM-56 was found to swell readily at room temperature with various hydroxide sources, and notably with NaOH, in combination with the surfactant. The observed differences between MCM-56 and MCM-22P, especially with regard to swelling with NaOH, are attributed to the fundamentally different nature of their layer surface and i...

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