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Magnesium analogues of aluminosilicate inorganic polymers (geopolymers) from magnesium minerals

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<mark>Journal publication date</mark>1/02/2013
<mark>Journal</mark>Journal of Materials Science
Issue number4
Volume48
Number of pages7
Pages (from-to)1787-1793
Publication StatusPublished
Early online date16/10/12
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Abstract

Attempts to synthesise magnesium-containing analogues of aluminosilicate geopolymers from the 1:1 and 2:1 layer magnesiosilicate minerals chrysotile and talc, as well as the magnesium mineral sepiolite are reported. The effect of pre-treating these starting minerals by grinding and/or dehydroxylation was also investigated by XRD, 29Si and natural-abundance 25Mg solid-state magic angle spinning (MAS) NMR spectroscopy. The products from sepiolite most closely resembled an aluminosilicate geopolymer, setting at 40 °C to an X-ray amorphous product containing a broad characteristic 29Si MAS NMR resonance at −90 ppm. The 25Mg MAS NMR spectrum of this product also showed evidence that some of the Mg was located in tetrahedral sites, as expected for a conventional geopolymer. A similar 25Mg MAS NMR result was obtained for chrysotile, but talc proved to be extremely resistant to geopolymer synthesis, requiring treatment at 120 °C for 3 days to set to a friable material retaining the XRD and NMR characteristics of the original talc or its crystalline dehydroxylation products. This lack of reactivity may be related to the 2:1 layer-lattice talc structure, or to the fact that a suitably reactive amorphous product is not formed upon dehydroxylation.

Bibliographic note

Date of Acceptance: 05/10/2012