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Zeolites get an organic makeover. (Materials Science).


The labyrinth of pores that characterize a family of inorganic crystals known as zeolites gives the crystals catalytic and adsorbent adsorbent /ad·sor·bent/ (ad-sor´bent)
1. pertaining to or characterized by adsorption.

2. a substance that attracts other materials or particles to its surface by adsorption.
 powers. The crystals, which occur in natural and synthetic forms, are used in refining petroleum, removing water from organic solvents, and a host of other laboratory and industrial processes (SN: 10/5/02, p. 213).

Now, scientists in Japan have incorporated organic chemical groups into zeolites' frameworks. Zeolites typically contain silicon and aluminum, with oxygen linking the elements together. Organic parts could enable zeolites to remove organic substances from water or catalyze different reactions than purely inorganic zeolites do, comments Christopher W. Jones of the Georgia Institute of Technology Georgia Institute of Technology, in Atlanta, Ga.; coeducational; state supported; chartered 1885, opened 1888. It is a member school in the university system of Georgia. Significant among its facilities and programs are the Frank H.  in Atlanta, who has tried to make organic zeolites.

In the April 18 Science, the Japanese researchers describe how they replaced a conventional starting material, called tetraethyl orthosilicate Tetraethyl orthosilicate is the major chemical compound with the formula Si(OC2H5)4. Often abbreviated TEOS, this molecule consists of four ethyl groups attached to SiO44- ion, which is called orthosilicate. , with a substance equally hard to say: bis(triethoxysilyl) methane. This change resulted in the replacement of many oxygen atoms with methylene groups, each of which contains a carbon atom and two hydrogen atoms. These organic groups enabled the new zeolites to adsorb adsorb /ad·sorb/ (ad-sorb´) to attract and retain other material on the surface; to conduct the process of adsorption.

ad·sorb
v.
To take up by adsorption.
 some organic molecules, but the zeolites didn't catalyze any new reactions.

"Introduction of methylene groups is just a first step," says coauthor Takashi Tatsumi of Yokohama National University Yokohama National University (横浜国立大学  . The scientists now plan to introduce catalytically active organic groups into their zeolites.

In the past, attempts at creating useful organic zeolites have hit snags, says Jones. For example, the organic groups in his zeolites stuck out of the framework and blocked its pores. The Japanese team has succeeded in incorporating the organic groups right into the zeolite zeolite

Any member of a family of hydrated aluminosilicate minerals that have a framework structure enclosing interconnected cavities occupied by large metal cations (positively charged ions)—generally sodium, potassium, magnesium, calcium, and barium—and water
 framework.--J.G.
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Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:9JAPA
Date:May 17, 2003
Words:269
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