Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
Adsorption
When a gas or vapour phase is brought into contact with a solid, part of it is taken up and remains on the outside attached to the surface. In physisorption (physical adsorption), there is a weak Van der Waals attraction between the adsorbate and the solid surface. Useful to characterise porous materials allowing for the determination of specific surface area, pore size distribution and pore volume.
Adsorption Isotherms
An Adsorption Isotherm is obtained by measuring the amount of gas adsorbed across a wide range of relative pressures at a constant temperature (typically liquid N2, 77K). Conversely desorption Isotherms are achieved by measuring gas removed as pressure is reduced
Iostherm types
Type I Pores are typically microporus with the exposed surface residing almost exclusively inside the microspores, which once filled with adsorbate, leave little or no external surface for further adsorption.
Type II Most frequently found when adsorption occurs on nonporous powders or powders with diameters exceeding micropores. Inflection point occurs near the completion of the first adsorbed monolayer
Type III Characterised by heats of adsorption less than the adsorbate heat of liquification, adsorption proceeds as the adsorbate interaction with an adsorbed layer is greater than the interaction with the adsorbent surface
Type IV Occur on porous adsorbents with pores in the range of 1.5 100nm. At higher pressures the slope shows increased uptake of adsorbate as pores become filled, inflection point typically occurs near completion of the first monolayer
Type V Are observed where there is small adsorbateabsorbent interaction potentials (similar to type III), and are also associated with pores in the 1.5 100nm range
Adsorbate
The most common adsorbate used is Nitrogen, however, other adsorbates are used in some circumstances.
BET
Brunauer, Emmett and Teller (BET), most common method used to describe specific surface area: The BET equation
W= weight of gas adsorbed P/P0 =relative pressure Wm = weight of adsorbate as monolayer C = BET constant
Wm (weight of monolayer)
N = Avogadro's number (6.023x1023) M = Molecular weight of Adsorbate Acs = Adsorbate cross sectional area (16.22 for Nitrogen)
Specific Surface Area (S) is then determined by total Surface area by sample weight
Single point BET: Involves determining specific surface area using a single point on the isotherm Multipoint BET: Minimum of three data points.
Relative Pressure P/Po 1.10536e-01 1.53021e-01 1.99422e-01 2.48028e-01 2.97227e-01 Summary Slope = 108.451
Volume @ STP 1/[W((Po/P)-1] cc/g 7.5355 8.1192 8.7403 9.4102 10.1099 1.3195e+1 1.7804e+1 2.2803e+1 2.8045e+1 3.3472e+1
Intercept = 1.195e+00 Correlation coefficient, r = 0.99999 C constant= 91.759 Surface Area = 31.762 m/g
C Constant
Relative error between single and multipoint BET, (typically measured at P/P0 of 0.3)
Single/Multi point Comparison Constant 1 10 50 100 1000 Infinity Relative error 0.70 0.19 0.04 0.02 0.0002 0
Langmuir
The Langmuir equation describes Microporus material exhibiting Type I Isotherms.
Other pore geometry models may require further information on the isotherm hysteresis before applying appropriate model.
Adsorption/Desorption Isotherm
Other Methods
Barrett-Joyner-Halenda Method (BJH) Dollimore Heal Method (DH) Alpha S Method (s) MP Method (MP) Dubinn-Radushkevic Method (DR) Dubinin-Astakhov Method (DA) Horvath-Kawazoe Method (HK) Saito-Foley Method (SF) Density Functional Theory Method (DFT) Frenkel-Halsey-Hill Method (FHH) Neimark-Kiselev Method (NK)
Degas
Important step before measurement of surface area or pore size/volume Surfaces are cleaned of water/organic vapours in two ways:1. With heating under a vacuum 2. Under a flow of dry, inert gas.
Analysis
Adsorbate is introduced in to the manifold The valve to the sample cell is opened allowing the adsorbate to interact with the sample material. The pressure is repeatedly measured for the preset equilibration time, if the pressure drops dosing recurs and measurement proceeds until a stable reading is achieved.