JOURNAL ARTICLE

Mesoporous Silica with an Alveolar Construction Obtained by Eco-Friendly Treatment of Rice Husks

Abstract

The high silicon content in rice plant waste, specifically rice husks, makes this waste by-product attractive for the extraction and valorization of silicon oxide, which is widely used as an inert support in catalysis, drug delivery and molecular sieving. The procedures currently used for the treatment of plant biomass make extensive use of mineral acids (HCl, H2SO4, HNO3), which, besides them being potential environmental pollutants, reduce the yield and worsen the chemical-physical properties of the product. In this study, an evaluation of the easy treatment of rice husks by benchmarking different, more eco-friendly carboxylic acids in order to obtain a mesoporous SiO2 with an alveolar structure and a relatively high surface area and pore volume (300–420 m2/g, 0.37–0.46 cm3/g) is presented. The obtained mesoporous silicas are characterized by worm-like pores with a narrow size distribution and a maximum in the range of 3.4–3.5 nm. The mesoporous structure of the obtained materials was also confirmed by TEM. The complete removal of the organic part of the rice husks in the final materials was evidenced by thermogravimetric analysis. The high purity of the obtained mesoporous silica was detected using ICP analysis (98.8 wt. %). The structure peculiarities of the obtained mesoporous silicas were also characterized by solid-state NMR and ATR-FTIR spectroscopies. The morphology of the mesoporous silica was investigated by SEM.

Keywords:
Husk Environmentally friendly Inert Biomass (ecology) Waste management Mesoporous material Silicon Pulp and paper industry Catalysis Extraction (chemistry) Mesoporous silica Materials science Chemistry Environmental science Organic chemistry Agronomy Engineering Botany Biology

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7
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1.19
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
24
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0.77
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Citation History

Topics

Mesoporous Materials and Catalysis
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Materials Chemistry
Supercapacitor Materials and Fabrication
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
Silicon Effects in Agriculture
Life Sciences →  Agricultural and Biological Sciences →  Plant Science

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