The waste from the processing of kaolin in the Amazonian region of Brazil was subjected to a calcination process at 700°C for 2 h to obtain metakaolin, which, together with sodium hydroxide and sodium silicate, formed the reaction mixture. This mixture was subjected to an aging step (24 h at 60 rpm), and a subsequent hydrothermal process at 110°C for 10 h. By means of X-ray diffraction (XRD), differential thermal and thermogravimetric analysis (DTA/TG) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) techniques, the crystallization of a single phase, faujasite (FAU) zeolite, was observed. In the postsynthesis process, it was verified by means of XRD that the thermal stability of this structure persists up to a temperature of 600°C. At 800°C, the structure of FAU collapses. Beginning at 850°C, new nepheline phases are formed, and at 1000°C, nepheline and mullite phases are formed.
Keywords:
Kaolin waste; metakaolin; faujasite zeolite; thermal stability