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American Chemical Society, Journal of Physical Chemistry B (Soft Condensed Matter and Biophysical Chemistry), 30(103), p. 6160-6170, 1999

DOI: 10.1021/jp983316q

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Thermal Evolution of Transitional Aluminas Followed by NMR and IR Spectroscopies

Journal article published in 1999 by C. Pecharromán, I. Sobrados ORCID, J. E. Iglesias, T. González Carreño, J. Sanz
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Thermal decomposition of boehmite and bayerite has been studied by X-ray diffraction and by NMR and IR spectroscopies. Coordination and site distortion of Al polyhedra have been estimated by Al-27 NMR spectroscopy while IR optical properties of transitional aluminas, eta-, gamma-, delta-, and theta-Al2O3 were derived from IR near-normal specular reflectance technique. In the low-temperature phases, aluminum vacancies are located in tetrahedral positions in gamma-Al2O3 while in eta-Al2O3 they are distributed at random between tetrahedral and octahedral positions. In addition, a small amount (5%) of pentahedrally coordinated aluminum was found in gamma-alumina, which has been tentatively assigned to Al at the external surface of alumina particles. At 800 degrees C a notable increase in structural ordering was detected in both phases; in the case of eta-Al2O3, this change accelerates the continuous transformation into theta-Al2O3 which is totally achieved at 1000 degrees C. On the contrary, gamma-Al2O3, does not show any sign of transformation until 900 degrees C; at 950 degrees C pentahedral cations disappear and formation of theta-Al2O3 is detected by IR and NMR techniques. From 900 to 1200 degrees C, gamma-, theta-, and alpha-Al2O3 coexist in samples obtained from boehmite. Above 1200 degrees C corundum is the only thermodynamically stable phase in both series of samples.