Silica nanoparticles from South African coal fly ash derived sodium silicate solutions
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University of Pretoria
Abstract
Silica nanoparticles are one of the most frequently used inorganic support materials for
heterogeneous catalyst immobilization. Their high thermal and chemical resistance, and their
good sorption properties provided by their high surface area and porous structure, tailor their
suitability as catalyst support. The presence of high concentrations of hydroxyl groups at the
surface of silica nanoparticles facilitates catalyst attachment. Commercially prepared silica
nanoparticles such as MCM-41 and SBA-15 are frequently used support materials. The
production and application of ultra-pure silica nanoparticles produced from coal fly ash (CFA),
as alternative catalyst support in the oxidation of veratryl alcohol was investigated in this study.
The production of amorphous mesoporous silica (SiO2) nanoparticles can be achieved using
sodium silicate (Na2SiO3) solutions prepared from South African CFA. CFA is a by-product
from the combustion of pulverised coal in thermoelectric power stations. South Africa’s public
electricity utility, Eskom, consumes about 120 million tons of coal per annum, which produces
34 million tons of CFA. About 7 % of South African CFA is recycled, mostly in the cement
and construction industry. Due to its high silicon and aluminium content, CFA could represent
a valuable secondary resource for purified silica and alumina, provided suitable economicallyviable processes can be developed.
The first part of this study compared two processes for the preparation of Na2SiO3 solutions
from CFA. The first process, hereafter called sequential acid-alkaline leaching (SAAL), is a
two-stage process, which involves (i) a H2SO4 leaching step for the preferential extraction of
reactive aluminium over silicon, followed by (ii) the preferential extraction of silicon over
aluminium from the resulting residues using NaOH. The second process is a direct alkaline
leaching (DAL) process, which consists of a single-stage elemental extraction from ash using
NaOH, i.e. without the preceding acid leaching step used in SAAL. The reason for comparing
these two processes was to test whether the removal of reactive aluminium from CFA, prior to
silicon extraction for the production of intermediate Na2SiO3 solutions, is beneficial to SiO2
nanoparticles synthesis. The two processes generated Na2SiO3 solutions with identical pH
(11.8), similar silicon (10.2-10.3 g/L), iron (ca. 200 mg/L) and potassium (ca. 800 mg/L)
content, and low calcium concentrations (≤ 29 mg/L). However, the inclusion of the acid leaching step in the SAAL process yielded a Na2SiO3 solution with substantially lower
aluminium (166 mg/L vs 1158 mg/L).
The Na2SiO3 solutions obtained from the SAAL and DAL processes were used as silica
precursors to synthesise sub-200 nm amorphous mesoporous silica nanoparticles via a sol-gel
method using polyethylene glycol (PEG) as surfactant and sulphuric acid as catalyst.
Synthesised silica nanoparticles were characterised by a high level of purity (up to 99.3 wt. %
SiO2). Removal of reactive aluminium from CFA prior to silicon extraction during the
production of Na2SiO3 solutions slightly improved the purity of the SiO2 nanoparticle products.
Varying the surfactant (CTAB, CPC, SLS and PEG) used as dispersing agent improved the
purity (99.9 wt. %), specific surface area (741-785 m2
g
-1
), pore volume (0.40 cm3
g
-1
) and
dispersion of the synthesised silica nanoparticles when CTAB or CPC were used. The physical
properties of the obtained silica nanoparticles compared well to those of commercial silica
nanoparticles (MCM-41 and SBA-15).
The suitability of the SiO2 nanoparticles prepared from CFA as catalyst supports was
demonstrated by testing them as catalyst support for a copper(II) 2-[(E)-(propylimino)methyl]
phenol complex, used as catalyst precursor in the oxidation of veratryl alcohol with tert-butyl
hydrogen peroxide as oxidant. The functionalized copper complex was successfully
immobilized onto the silica nanoparticle supports and the resulting catalyst had the ability of
oxidizing veratryl alcohol to veratrylaldehyde and veratric acid. The degree of conversion of
veratryl alcohol and the selectivity of the catalyst was influenced by the physical properties of
the silica nanoparticle support. The performance of the CFA-derived supports compared
favourably to that of commercial MCM-41 and SBA-15 in the specific catalyst process
investigated.
This thesis successfully demonstrates the synthesis of amorphous mesoporous silica
nanoparticles from sodium silicate solutions, which were prepared from a South African
classified coal fly ash. It further validates the application of the silica nanoparticles as catalyst
support in heterogeneous catalysis, proving that these products can potentially be employed as
alternative to commercially available mesoporous silica.
Description
Thesis (PhD (Chemistry))--University of Pretoria, 2020.
Keywords
Chemistry, UCTD
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Aphane, ME 2020, Silica nanoparticles from South African coal fly ash derived sodium silicate solutions, PhD (Chemistry) Thesis, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, viewed yymmdd <http://hdl.handle.net/2263/74407>