Experimental and theoretical investigations of adsorption hysteresis and criticality in MCM-41: studies with O2, Ar, and CO2

Sonwane, C. G. ; Calos, N. ; Bhatia, S. K. (1998) Experimental and theoretical investigations of adsorption hysteresis and criticality in MCM-41: studies with O2, Ar, and CO2 Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research, 37 (6). pp. 2271-2283. ISSN 0888-5885

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Official URL: http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ie970883b

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ie970883b

Abstract

MCM-41 materials of six different pore diameters were prepared and characterized using X-ray diffraction, transmission electron microscopy, helium pycnometry, small-angle neutron scattering, and gas adsorption (argon at 77.4 and 87.4 K, nitrogen and oxygen at 77.4 K, and carbon dioxide at 194.6 K). A recent molecular continuum model of the authors, previously used for adsorption of nitrogen at 77.4 K, was applied here for adsorption of argon, oxygen, and carbon dioxide. While model predictions of single-pore adsorption isotherms for argon and oxygen are in satisfactory agreement with experimental data, significant deviation was found for carbon dioxide, most likely due to its high quadrupole moment. Predictions of critical pore diameter, below which reversible condensation occurs, were possible by the model and found to be consistent with experimental estimates, for the adsorption of the various gases. On the other hand, existing models such as the Barrett-Joyner-Halenda (BJH), Saito-Foley, and Dubinin-Astakhov models were found to be inadequate, either predicting an incorrect pore diameter or not correlating the isotherms adequately. The wall structure of MCM-41 appears to be close to that of amorphous silica, as inferred from our skeletal density measurements.

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