
Catalysis by Microporous Materials
- 1st Edition, Volume 94 - May 19, 1995
- Imprint: Elsevier Science
- Editors: H.K. Beyer, J.B. Nagy, H.G. Karge, I. Kiricsi
- Language: English
- eBook ISBN:9 7 8 - 0 - 0 8 - 0 5 4 4 6 7 - 0
ZEOCAT '95 is the eleventh in the series of symposia devoted to special fields of zeolite chemistry. Six plenary lectures, forty oral and forty-two poster presentations were… Read more
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ZEOCAT '95 is the eleventh in the series of symposia devoted to special fields of zeolite chemistry. Six plenary lectures, forty oral and forty-two poster presentations were included in the program. The accepted papers cover every aspect of catalysis on microporous materials. A significant number of the contributions describe the synthesis, modification, instrumental and chemical characterisation of zeolites and other micro- and mesoporous materials. Catalytic reactions involve hydrocarbon cracking, nucleophilic aromatic substitution, methanol to hydrocarbon conversion, hydration of acetylene, various alkylation reactions, redox transformations, Claisen rearrangement, etc.
(A selection). The future of shape selective catalysis (S.M. Csicsery). Pillared layered structures (PLS): From microporous to nano-phase materials (R. Szostak, C. Ingram). Powder X-ray diffraction and solid waste NMR techniques for zeolite structure determination (G.T. Kokotailo et al.). New aspects and trends in zeolite catalysis (J. Weitkamp et al.). Covalent interactions in zeolites: The influence of zeolite composition and structure on acid softness and hardness (A. Corma). Author index. Subject index.
- Edition: 1
- Volume: 94
- Published: May 19, 1995
- Imprint: Elsevier Science
- Language: English
HB
H.K. Beyer
Affiliations and expertise
Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, HungaryJN
J.B. Nagy
Affiliations and expertise
University of Notre-Dame de la Paix, Namur, BelgiumHK
H.G. Karge
Affiliations and expertise
Fritz Haber Institute of the Max Planck Society, D-14195 Berlin, GermanyIK
I. Kiricsi
Affiliations and expertise
József Attila University, Department of Applied and Environmental Chemistry, H-6720 Szeged, HungaryRead Catalysis by Microporous Materials on ScienceDirect