The second edition of The Chemistry of Clay-Organic Reactions (which follows 50 years after the first edition was published in 1974) provides a comprehensive and fully updated summary of the literature on the interactions of clay minerals with organic molecules, including reaction mechanisms and bonding modes together with their practical and industrial applications. The reader will gain an insight into the formation and properties of complexes between clay minerals and a variety of organic compounds and the use of such complexes as sorbents and carriers of organic pollutants, pesticides, dyes, and pharmaceuticals.
This book is written for environmental and industrial chemists, organic geochemists, and soil scientists, and it will appeal to academics, researchers, industry professionals, and graduate students.
1. Clays and Clay Minerals: Structures and Surface Properties
2. Interactions of Clay Minerals with Uncharged Organic Compounds
3. Interactions of Clay Minerals with Organic Compounds of Biological and Environmental Importance
4. Interactions of Clay Minerals with Positively Charged Organic Compounds
5. Interactions of Clay Minerals with Negatively Charged Organic Compounds
6. Organic Complexes of Clay Minerals with a 1:1 Type Layer Structure
7. Organic Complexes of Clay Minerals with Layer-Ribbon and Short-Range Order Structures
Benny K.G. Theng is an honorary research associate with Manaaki Whenua-Landcare Research in Palmerston North, New Zealand (NZ). Before joining the research staff of MW-LC in 1992, he was a senior scientist with the NZ Soil Bureau, Department of Scientific and Industrial Research (DSIR). The focus of his distinguished research career has been on the behaviour and reactivity of small and polymeric organic compounds at clay mineral surfaces. He was born in Indonesia but did all his undergraduate and postgraduate studies at the University of Adelaide, Australia, gaining a PhD degree in soil science. He was a research fellow, lecturer, mentor, and visiting scientist at several universities and research institutes in Australia, Belgium, Germany, Japan, France, Chile, and China. He also did some consulting work for clay-based companies in America and Europe. He is the recipient of a senior Humboldt fellowship (Germany), an Adam Hilger Prize (UK) for his first book, the ICI Prize (NZ) for chemical research, and the Bailey Distinguished Member Award for outstanding contributions to clay science from the Clay Minerals Society (USA). He is a Fellow of the NZ Institute of Chemistry, the NZ Society of Soil Science, and the Royal Society of New Zealand. He likes reading historical books and thrillers, playing contract bridge, and listening to classical and chamber music.