The formation and growth of tetrapropylammonium-templated crystal
nuclei of silicalite from a clear
homogeneous solution was recorded in situ as a function of time at
temperatures between 90 and 115 °C
using small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS). The kinetics of the
nucleation process was studied and give an
apparent activation energy of 70 kJ mol-1.
A small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) contrast variation
study
confirms that the nuclei contain the tetrapropylammonium template in
the expected stoichiometry of the
completed crystal. Infrared spectroscopy provides evidence that
the silicalite framework structure is present
in the nuclei. Our SAXS and SANS data both show that a cylindrical
form factor gave the best fit to the
measured scattering functions for the particles that developed from
nucleation to the end of the induction
period. Dynamic light scattering measurements were used to follow
the crystal growth in the 100−6000 Å
size domain, beyond the range of the SAXS measurements. Scanning
electron microscopy was also used to
determine crystal morphology and particle sizes of sedimented crystals
and freeze-dried solutions. We have
proposed a detailed model for the nucleation and crystallization
processes wherein cylindrical primary nuclei,
2 × 2 unit cells in cross section, form very quickly upon heating and
then assemble end-to-end along the
crystal c axis into 330 Å long primary crystallites during
an extended induction period, followed by the
aggregation of the primary crystallites into polycrystalline ellipsoids
of length 6000 Å.
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