The Chemistry of Continental Solids 127
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Pillared clay
Surfactant-modified clay
Toxicant
adsorption
Immobilized toxicant
Alumina-pillared clay
CO 2 + H 2 O + HX
Surfactant
Combustion
Fig. 2Scheme for recycling surfactant-modified pillared clay mineral adsorbents during thermal treatment
of toxicant. From Michot and Pinnavaia (1991), with kind permission from the Clay Minerals Society.
polar carboxylate group, for example sodium
octadecanoate (sodium stearate).
The polar carboxylate head dissolves in water,
while the long, non-polar hydrocarbon-chain
tail is hydrophobic (Box 4.14) but mixes well
with greasy (lipophilic, Box 4.14) substances,
effectively floating the grease into solution in
a sheath of COO-groups.
CH CH COO Na
non polar hydrocarbon tail carboxylate head
32 ( ) 16
( )( )
— -+
Surfactant-coated interlayer sites in
smectite have similar properties to
detergents. A hydrophobic molecule or
compound such as dioxin or other
chlorinated phenol is attracted to the
hydrophobic hydrocarbon tail projecting from
the interlayer surface and immobilized.
The modified smectite thus has good
affinity and selectivity for its target
contaminant and is thermally stable,
recyclable and economic to use (Fig. 2).