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Catalyst Preparation by Ion Exchange

Ion exchange is a reversible chemical process where an insoluble substance removes an ion from a solution and releases another ion of the same charge. It is a stoichiometric process that is similar to adsorption but requires an interchange of ions to maintain electroneutrality. Ion exchange materials include natural substances like zeolites as well as artificial materials, and can act as either anion or cation exchangers depending on whether they fix negative or positive ions.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
270 views1 page

Catalyst Preparation by Ion Exchange

Ion exchange is a reversible chemical process where an insoluble substance removes an ion from a solution and releases another ion of the same charge. It is a stoichiometric process that is similar to adsorption but requires an interchange of ions to maintain electroneutrality. Ion exchange materials include natural substances like zeolites as well as artificial materials, and can act as either anion or cation exchangers depending on whether they fix negative or positive ions.

Uploaded by

Nana Tweneboah
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Catalyst Preparation by Ion Exchange

Ion exchange is a process, whereby an insoluble substance removes an ion of positive or


negative charge from an electrolyte solution and releases another ion of like charge into the
solution in a chemically equivalent manner. Ion exchange is the exchange of ions at the
surface of the support (solid electrolyte) by different ions and it’s basically a reversible
chemical process.
Since ion exchange occurs between a solution and the internal surface of a solid it can be
viewed as a special type of sorption process. There are many similarities between adsorption
and ion exchange. The two processes are often analyzed using similar models. Unlike
adsorption, ion exchange requires an interchange of materials, i.e., the ions (as opposed to a
unidirectional transfer) since the electroneutrality of the solution must be maintained.
Ion exchange resembles sorption in that, in both cases, a dissolved species is taken up
by a solid. The characteristic difference between the two phenomena is that, ion exchange is a
stoichiometric process while sorption is a non-stoichiometric process. Every ion that has been
removed from the solution is replaced by an equivalent amount of another ionic species of the
same sign from the ion exchange material. In sorption, a solute/electrolyte is taken up without
being replaced by an equivalent species. Though this difference is clear, it is difficult to
distinguish between exchange and sorption, since every ion exchange process is accompanied
by electrolytic sorption or desorption and most of the common sorbents such as alumina and
activated carbon act in turn as ion exchangers.
Ion Exchangers

Types of Ion Exchangers


a) Natural or Artificial (pillared clays, hydrotalcite, zeolites).
b) Anion- exchanger (eg. –NR₄⁺) and Cation-exchanger (O⁻: zeolites, oxides,
polymers: SO₃⁻, -CO₂⁻).

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