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Tuesday, December 17, 2019

ZEOLITES – The most interesting thing about zeolites is their open, cage-like, "framework" structure and the way it can trap other molecules inside it. Zeolites can exchange other positively charged ions for the metal ions originally trapped inside them (technically this is known as cation exchange) and, they can gain or lose their water molecules very easily too (this is called reversible dehydration). Zeolites have regular openings in them of fixed size, which let small molecules pass straight through but trap larger ones; that's why they're sometimes referred to as molecular sieves. Unlike natural zeolites, which occur in random forms and mixed sizes, synthetic zeolites are manufactured in very precise and uniform sizes (typically from about 1μm to 1mm) to suit a particular application - they're made a certain size to trap molecules of a certain (smaller) size inside them. One of the biggest everyday uses for zeolites is in water softeners and water filters. The zeolites trap the calcium and magnesium ions and release sodium ions in their place, so the water becomes softer but richer in sodium.

Animation showing how ion exchange works.
Animation (above): Ion exchange in zeolites: the zeolite "cage" (gray) traps incoming ions (red and orange) and releases others (yellow) in their place.
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Artwork showing the structure of zeolite crystals
The power of nothingness: 
in zeolite crystals, 
like the one in this illustration,
the pores in between the aluminum, silicon, and oxygen atoms 
are as important as the crystal structure itself. 
Zeolites
hydrated aluminosilicate minerals


Heat a glass of water and you'll see steam rise off it sooner or later as it comes to the boil.
You certainly don't expect the same thing to happen if you heat a rock — unless it's a special kind of rock called a zeolite, which traps water inside it.
Back In 1756, Swedish geologist Axel Cronstedt (1722–1765) — best known as the discoverer of nickel — coined the name "zeolite" because it literally means "boiling stone"; today, the term refers to over 200 different minerals that have all kinds of interesting uses, from water softeners and cat litter to animal food and industrial catalysts.
What are zeolites and how do they work? Let's take a closer look!
What are zeolites?
Zeolites are hydrated aluminosilicate minerals made from interlinked tetrahedra of alumina (AlO4) and silica (SiO4).
In simpler words, they're solids with a relatively open, three-dimensional crystal structure built from the elements aluminum, oxygen, and silicon, with alkali or alkaline-Earth metals (such as sodium, potassium, and magnesium) plus water molecules trapped in the gaps between them.
Zeolites form with many different crystalline structures, which have large open pores (sometimes referred to as cavities) in a very regular arrangement and roughly the same size as small molecules.
There are about 40 naturally occurring zeolites, forming in both volcanic and sedimentary rocks; according to the US Geological Survey, the most commonly mined forms include chabaziteclinoptilolite, and mordenite.
Dozens more artificial, synthetic zeolites (around 150) have been designed for specific purposes, the best known of which are zeolite A (commonly used as a laundry detergent), zeolites X and Y (two different types of faujasites, used for catalytic cracking), and the petroleum catalyst ZSM-5 (a branded name for pentasil-zeolite).
What special properties do zeolites have?
Zeolites are very stable solids that resist the kinds of environmental conditions that challenge many other materials.
High temperatures don't bother them because they have relatively high melting points (over 1000°C), and they don't burn.
They also resist high pressures, don't disssolve in water or other inorganic solvents, and don't oxidize in the air.
They're not believed to cause health problems through, for example, skin contact or inhalation, though in fibrous form, they may have carcinogenic (cancer-causing) effects.
Since they're unreactive and based on naturally occurring minerals, they're not believed to have any harmful environmental impacts.
Although zeolites might sound incredibly boring, their stable and unreactive nature isn't what makes them useful.
The most interesting thing about zeolites is their open, cage-like, "framework" structure and the way it can trap other molecules inside it.
This is how water molecules and alkali or alkaline-Earth metal ions (positively charged atoms with too few electrons, sometimes called cations) become a part of zeolite crystals — although they don't necessarily remain there permanently.
Zeolites can exchange other positively charged ions for the metal ions originally trapped inside them (technically this is known as cation exchange) and, as Cronstedt found over 250 years ago, they can gain or lose their water molecules very easily too (this is called reversible dehydration).
Zeolites have regular openings in them of fixed size, which let small molecules pass straight through but trap larger ones; that's why they're sometimes referred to as molecular sieves.
Unlike natural zeolites, which occur in random forms and mixed sizes, synthetic zeolites are manufactured in very precise and uniform sizes (typically from about 1μm to 1mm) to suit a particular application; in other words, they're made a certain size to trap molecules of a certain (smaller) size inside them.
Although all zeolites are aluminosilicates, some contain more alumina, while others contain more silica.
Alumina-rich zeolites are attracted to polar molecules such as water, while silica-rich zeolites work better with nonpolar molecules.
What are zeolites used for?
The cage-like structure of zeolites makes them useful in all sorts of ways.
One of the biggest everyday uses for zeolites is in water softeners and water filters.
In ion-exchange water softeners, for example, hard water (rich in calcium and magnesium ions) is piped through a column filled with sodium-containing zeolites.
The zeolites trap the calcium and magnesium ions and release sodium ions in their place, so the water becomes softer but richer in sodium.
Many everyday laundry and dishwasher detergents contain zeolites to remove calcium and magnesium and soften water so they work more effectively.
Two other very common, everyday uses of zeolites are in odor control and pet litter; in both, the porous crystalline structure of the zeolites helps by trapping unwanted liquids and odor molecules.
This simple idea, so effective in our homes, has much more important uses outside them: zeolites have proved extremely effective at removing radioactive particles from nuclear waste and cleaning up soils contaminated with toxic heavy metals.
(Following the Fukushima nuclear disaster in Japan in 2011, rice farmers spread zeolites on their fields in an attempt to trap any lingering radioactive contaminants.)
The many other uses for zeolites including concrete production, soil-conditioners, and animal food.
It's easy to find websites claiming all sorts of health benefits for zeolite food supplements, even advocating them as a cure for cancer.
However, you need to be extremely careful about believing medical information you find online: when it comes to your health, make sure you refer to websites you know you can trust — and preferably ones that aren't trying to sell you things.
A search of Pubmed (the worldwide database of peer-reviewed biomedical papers run by the US National Library of Medicine) suggests there is currently little scientific evidence to support the idea that zeolites have positive benefits in human food supplements, though there are some papers that suggest possible benefits in dairy cows, poultry, goats, and mice.
In a one-page summary last updated in June 2017, the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center confirms this: "Zeolites are also marketed as dietary supplements to treat cancer, diarrhea, autism, herpes, and hangover, and to balance pH and remove heavy metals in the body... [There are] Benefits of using zeolites in animal feed... However, none of these benefits are applicable to humans... Currently, no studies of zeolite as a cancer treatment in humans have been published."
It's also worth noting that the US Food and Drug Administration has sent a number of warning letters to websites making unsubstantiated therapeutic claims about zeolite products (see references below for examples).
What are zeolite catalysts?
Another important use for zeolites is as catalysts in drug (pharmaceutical) production and in the petrochemical industry, where they're used in catalytic crackers to break large hydrocarbon molecules into gasoline, diesel, kerosene, waxes and all kinds of other byproducts of petroleum.
Again, it's the porous structure of zeolites that proves important.
The many pores in a zeolite's open structure are like millions of tiny test tubes where atoms and molecules become trapped and chemical reactions readily take place.
Since the pores in a particular zeolite are of a fixed size and shape, zeolite catalysts can work selectively on certain molecules, which is why they're sometimes referred to as shape-selective catalysts (they can select the molecules they work on in other ways beside shape and size, however).
Like all catalysts, zeolites are reusable over and over again.

Hello! I'm Chris Woodford, a British science writer, and I write all the articles on Explain that Stuff.
Books
I've written lots of books on science and technology, including the hugely popular how-it-works titles Cool Stuff and How it Works (How Cool Stuff Works) (with Ben Morgan et al), Cool Stuff 2.0 (The Gadget Book) (with Jon Woodcock), and Cool Stuff Exploded (published by Dorling Kindersley/DK), which have sold nearly four million copies worldwide. A couple of years ago, I wrote Science: A Visual/Children's Encyclopedia with Steve Parker, which has been garnering lots of five star reviews on Amazon and is now in its third major edition. My latest book, Atoms Under the Floorboards: The Surprising Science Hidden in Your Home, is published by Bloomsbury and is available worldwide.
I also work as a consultant and science adviser on other people's books, including children's science titles by Robert Winston, Johnny Ball, and Richard Hammond. Most recently, I've been helping David Macaulay with a revised edition of his classic mammoth book, The Way Things Work Now, which was Amazon.com's number one children's non-fiction book for 2016.
Awards
Books I've written, edited, consulted on, or otherwise contributed to have been translated into about 20 different languages and won or been shortlisted for over 40 awards, including the Royal Society Young People's Book Prize (in the UK) and the National Science Teachers Association Outstanding Science Trade Book award (in the United States). Atoms Under the Floorboards won The American Institute of Physics Science Writing Award for Books 2016 and was named one of Physics World's Top 10 Physics Books of 2015.
You can find a full list of my books, with review comments and details of the awards or other recognitions they've received on my personal website, chriswoodford.com.
Qualifications and experience
In case you're interested, I have an MA in Natural Sciences from Cambridge University. I specialized in physics (which I was very lucky to have been able to study at the Cavendish Laboratory) and experimental psychology, but also covered chemistry, crystallography, materials science, and math. (That's largely why the articles on Explain that Stuff lean so heavily toward the physical sciences rather than life-science topics, which I know less about.)
I've also spent a lot of my time working with computers and the Internet (I worked at IBM for about five years) and built my very first website in 1994, using an IBM System/390 mainframe and Mosaic. I had my first magazine article published back in 1981 (I was very young!) and I've been writing about science and technology pretty much ever since.
Examples of zeolite crystals.
 Synthetic zeolite crystals grown at CAMMP (Center for Advanced Microgravity Materials Processing), a NASA-sponsored Research Partnership Center. The ones on the right are about 10 times bigger (25μm) than the ones on the left (2.5μm).  
















Pie chart showing world mine production of natural zeolites.
Green alfalfa growing in a field with a zeolite seed coating to protect against soil-borne plant pathogens.
Scientists at the US Department of Agriculture have found that a coating of zeolite can help to protect the country's valuable, $10 billion-a-year alfalfa crop against soil-borne diseases. Since the zeolite occurs naturally, this treatment counts as organic.
Photo of catalytic cracker in petroleum refinery.
Zeolite catalysts are used in catalytic crackers like this one, which turn crude oil (petroleum) into dozens of useful everyday products and chemicals.

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