Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
595584 Colloids and Surfaces A: Physicochemical and Engineering Aspects 2010 20 Pages PDF
Abstract

The importance of shape in the adsorption of nitrogen, carbon dioxide and methane (common molecular probes for solid characterization) on surfaces and in confined spaces is investigated for its effects on the adsorption capacity and isosteric heat. We study the possibility of using an equivalent pseudo-sphere model to describe the potential energy of interaction of these molecular probes. On a flat open surface, we find that the equivalent pseudo-sphere model describes adsorption of these species sufficiently well. However, in the confined space of pores, especially pores that accommodate three layers or less, the pseudo-sphere model describes the adsorption badly because of the geometrical constraint on the molecular packing. It is recommended that to study adsorption properly in small pores, potential models that correctly describe molecular shape should be used. In characterization, pseudo-sphere models are commonly used to generate the kernels (local isotherms) for the determination of pore size distribution which can lead to misleading results. We illustrate this with an example to show that the wrong pore size distribution results if pseudo-sphere kernels are used.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Colloid and Surface Chemistry
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