Skip to Content
Merck
CN

20307

Molecular Sieve, 13Å

100-120 mesh, bottle of 50 g

Sign In to View Organizational & Contract Pricing.

Select a Size

Change View

About This Item

UNSPSC Code:
23201100
eCl@ss:
32110204
NACRES:
NB.21
Technical Service
Need help? Our team of experienced scientists is here for you.
Let Us Assist


Product Name

Molecular Sieve Adsorbent, matrix Molecular Sieve 13X, 100-120 mesh, bottle of 50 g

form

solid

Quality Level

packaging

bottle of 50 g

matrix

Molecular Sieve 13X

particle size

100-120 mesh

pore size

13 Å

density

~0.65 g/mL

General description

Molecular sieves are synthetically produced zeolites (naturally occurring aluminosilicate minerals), and are characterized by pores and internal cavities of extremely uniform dimensions. These crystalline materials have three-dimensional structures based on silicon oxide (SiO4) and aluminum oxide (AlO4) polyhedra. The polyhedra are linked by their corners to produce an open structure with internal cavities in which molecules can be trapped. These materials are engineered so that access to the internal cavities is through specific and uniform sized pores.

For more information about any of our adsorbents, please visit sigma-aldrich.com/adsorbents


Still not finding the right product?

Explore all of our products under Molecular Sieve Adsorbent


Storage Class

11 - Combustible Solids

wgk

WGK 3

flash_point_f

Not applicable

flash_point_c

Not applicable

ppe

Eyeshields, Gloves, type N95 (US)

Regulatory Information

新产品

This item has



Choose from one of the most recent versions:

Certificates of Analysis (COA)

Lot/Batch Number

It looks like we've run into a problem, but you can still download Certificates of Analysis from our Documents section.

If you need assistance, please contact Customer Support

Already Own This Product?

Find documentation for the products that you have recently purchased in the Document Library.

Visit the Document Library



Columns for Gas Chromatography: Performance and Selection.
Barry EF and Grob RL.
Science, 28-28 (2007)
M Schweigkofler et al.
Journal of hazardous materials, 83(3), 183-196 (2001-05-12)
Methods for the removal of gaseous silicon compounds in biogases are presented. In laboratory studies, various solid adsorption materials and liquid absorption solutions were evaluated for their siloxane elimination efficiencies. Among the liquid sorbents studied, concentrated nitric acid and sulfuric



Global Trade Item Number

SKUGTIN
2030704061833656563