Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
675160 | Thermochimica Acta | 2009 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Crystalline samples (characterized by XRD, PDF 00-35-1778 reference pattern) are releasing acetylacetone (acacH) vapors already from 140 °C onwards. At 245 °C, after an acceleration of this release process, a huge and sharp exothermic heat effect also occurs and results in additional evolution of acetic acid, CO2, H2O, and CO. Minute amount of unidentified volatile species with ion fragments not higher than m/z = 152 are also detected up to 285 °C. The remaining organic residues are burning out from the solid phase in two further exothermic stages until 500 °C. While an amorphous hydrated sample (with low acetylacetonate content) releases first 6.6% of water vapor until 140 °C, then acetone and acetylacetone up to 300 °C. Between 215 and 385 °C, some acetic acid, CO2, and CO is also evolved. Formation of CO2 is detected till 650 °C. At 800 °C, the anatase: rutile TiO2-ratio were 11:89 and 84:16 for the well-crystallized and the amorphous sample, respectively.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
Authors
János Madarász, Shoji Kaneko, Masayuki Okuya, György Pokol,