June 10, 2026
Neda Kalantari

Neda Kalantari

Academic Rank: Assistant professor
Address: •Department of Petroleum Engineering, Faculty of Petroleum, Gas, and Petrochemical Engineering
Degree: Ph.D in Chemical Engineering
Phone: 077-31222607
Faculty: Faculty of Petroleum, Gas and Petrochemical Engineering

Research

Title Synthesis of nanostructure hydroxy sodalite composite membranes via hydrothermal method: support surface modification and synthesis method effects
Type Article
Keywords
hydroxysodalite; zeolite membrane; support surface modification; in situ hydrothermal synthesis; secondary growth
Journal Asia-Pacific Journal of Chemical Engineering
DOI 10.1002/apj.1844
Researchers Neda Kalantari (First researcher) , Mohammad Javad Vaezi (Second researcher) , Mostafa Yadollahi (Third researcher) , Ali Akbar Babaluo (Fourth researcher) , Behruz Bayati (Fifth researcher) , Akram Kazemzadeh (Not in first six researchers)

Abstract

Multilayer hydroxy sodalite zeolite membranes were synthesized on the outer surface of support with and without modification via in situ and secondary growth hydrothermal synthesis methods. The synthesized zeolite membranes were characterized by X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy, and single gas (H2,N2, and n-pentane) permeation measurements at different pressure differences. The membranes synthesized by secondary growth method on the modified support were found to be highly intergrown, but the permeation results for hydrogen and n-pentane at a temperature of 323K were not repeatable, which can be related to the weak interaction between zeolite layer and substrate. High performance hydroxy sodalite zeolite membrane was successfully formed on a nonmodified α-Al2O3 support by in situ hydrothermal synthesis method. No permeance of n-pentane was measured for this membrane at 323K and 2bar so that infinite permselectivity of H2/n-C5H12 could be obtained for the four-layer synthesized membrane on the nonmodified support, verifying the synthesis of a good quality hydroxy sodalite zeolite membrane. © 2014 Curtin University of Technology and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.