2019
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-19970-8
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Environmentally Friendly Zeolites

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Cited by 8 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Zeolite Definition. The term zeolite, derived from the Greek words zein (boil) and lithos (rock), was first used to name a mineral that expanded upon being heated, in 1758 by the Swedish mineralogist Alex Fredrick Cronsted [25,31]. The reason for this peculiar behavior was only revealed in the year 1857, when it was discovered that these materials have a microporous crystalline structure, capable of storing water inside its pores and releasing it if heated, in theoretically infinite cycles of hydration and dehydration.…”
Section: Microporous Materials: Zeolitesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Zeolite Definition. The term zeolite, derived from the Greek words zein (boil) and lithos (rock), was first used to name a mineral that expanded upon being heated, in 1758 by the Swedish mineralogist Alex Fredrick Cronsted [25,31]. The reason for this peculiar behavior was only revealed in the year 1857, when it was discovered that these materials have a microporous crystalline structure, capable of storing water inside its pores and releasing it if heated, in theoretically infinite cycles of hydration and dehydration.…”
Section: Microporous Materials: Zeolitesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The reason for this peculiar behavior was only revealed in the year 1857, when it was discovered that these materials have a microporous crystalline structure, capable of storing water inside its pores and releasing it if heated, in theoretically infinite cycles of hydration and dehydration. At this time, it was also discovered the presence of compensation cations in zeolite crystalline structures and the ability they have to be removed by other ions in solution, through cation exchange [25,32]. Although these properties were important in several industrial sectors, these minerals remained unused for more than 200 years.…”
Section: Microporous Materials: Zeolitesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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