Publikace UTB
Repozitář publikační činnosti UTB

The effect of glow-discharge plasma and muffle furnace heating on the surface chemistry of kaolinite

Repozitář DSpace/Manakin

Zobrazit minimální záznam


dc.title The effect of glow-discharge plasma and muffle furnace heating on the surface chemistry of kaolinite en
dc.contributor.author Waters, Kristian E.
dc.contributor.author Greenwood, Richard W.
dc.contributor.author Rowson, Neil Anthony
dc.contributor.author Lapčík, Lubomír
dc.contributor.author Lapčíková, Barbora
dc.relation.ispartof AIChE Annual Meeting, Conference Proceedings
dc.date.issued 2006
dc.event.title 2006 AIChE Spring National Meeting - 5th World Congress on Particle Technology
dc.event.location Orlando, FL
utb.event.state-en United States
utb.event.state-cs Spojené státy americké
dc.event.sdate 2006-04-23
dc.event.edate 2006-04-27
dc.type conferenceObject
dc.language.iso en
dc.description.abstract Kaolinite is commonly used as a coating in the paper industry, and as a filler in the plastics industry. Therefore it is crucial that the particles are not flocculated. In order to achieve a stable system the surface chemistry is manipulated such that strong repulsive inter-particle forces are present. This paper then investigates the changes in the surface chemistry of a commercial kaolinite after treatment in a muffle furnace and in glow-discharge plasma. The effect of the surface treatment on the zeta potential of the kaolinite was investigated by electroacoustic means. Furnace heating lead to a decrease in the magnitude of the zeta potential at the natural pH, and the zeta potential was always negative over the pH range studied. No iso-electric point was found, rather a minima in the magnitude of the zeta potential was observed at a pH of 3.5. This minima was shifted to higher pH values after treatment. Analysis of the surfaces of the kaolinite particles was also performed by the use of a DVS Advantage (SMS UK Ltd). The muffle furnace heated kaolinite had a lower water uptake than the untreated kaolinite implying changes to the hydrophobic/ hydrophilic nature of the kaolinite surfaces. Normally dispersants are added to kaolinite suspensions to aid dispersions. As kaolinite is processed at a rate of several millions of tonnes per annum, a small reduction in the amount of dispersant required could result in a significant economic saving. en
utb.faculty Faculty of Technology
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10563/1004990
utb.identifier.scopus 2-s2.0-56749154953
utb.source d-scopus
dc.date.accessioned 2015-06-04T12:56:30Z
dc.date.available 2015-06-04T12:56:30Z
utb.contributor.internalauthor Lapčík, Lubomír
utb.contributor.internalauthor Lapčíková, Barbora
Find Full text

Soubory tohoto záznamu

Soubory Velikost Formát Zobrazit

K tomuto záznamu nejsou připojeny žádné soubory.

Zobrazit minimální záznam