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Adsorption

Adsorption is the adhesion[1] of atoms, ions or molecules from a gas, liquid or dissolved solid to a surface.[2] This process creates a film of the adsorbate on the surface of the adsorbent. This process differs from absorption, in which a fluid (the absorbate) is dissolved by or permeates a liquid or solid (the absorbent).[3] While adsorption does often precede absorption, which involves the transfer of the absorbate into the volume of the absorbent material, alternatively, adsorption is distinctly a surface phenomenon, wherein the adsorbate does not penetrate through the material surface and into the bulk of the adsorbent.[4] The term sorption encompasses both adsorption and absorption, and desorption is the reverse of sorption.

Brunauer, Emmett and Teller's model of multilayer adsorption is a random distribution of molecules on the material surface.
https://doi.org/10.1351/goldbook.A00155.

Like surface tension, adsorption is a consequence of surface energy. In a bulk material, all the bonding requirements (be they ionic, covalent or metallic) of the constituent atoms of the material are fulfilled by other atoms in the material. However, atoms on the surface of the adsorbent are not wholly surrounded by other adsorbent atoms and therefore can attract adsorbates. The exact nature of the bonding depends on the details of the species involved, but the adsorption process is generally classified as physisorption (characteristic of weak van der Waals forces) or chemisorption (characteristic of covalent bonding). It may also occur due to electrostatic attraction.[5][6] The nature of the adsorption can affect the structure of the adsorbed species. For example, polymer physisorption from solution can result in squashed structures on a surface.[7]

Adsorption is present in many natural, physical, biological and chemical systems and is widely used in industrial applications such as heterogeneous catalysts,[8][9] activated charcoal, capturing and using waste heat to provide cold water for air conditioning and other process requirements (adsorption chillers), synthetic resins, increasing storage capacity of carbide-derived carbons and water purification. Adsorption, ion exchange and chromatography are sorption processes in which certain adsorbates are selectively transferred from the fluid phase to the surface of insoluble, rigid particles suspended in a vessel or packed in a column. Pharmaceutical industry applications, which use adsorption as a means to prolong neurological exposure to specific drugs or parts thereof,[citation needed] are lesser known.

The word "adsorption" was coined in 1881 by German physicist Heinrich Kayser (1853–1940).[10]

Isotherms edit

The adsorption of gases and solutes is usually described through isotherms, that is, the amount of adsorbate on the adsorbent as a function of its pressure (if gas) or concentration (for liquid phase solutes) at constant temperature. The quantity adsorbed is nearly always normalized by the mass of the adsorbent to allow comparison of different materials. To date, 15 different isotherm models have been developed.[11]

Freundlich edit

The first mathematical fit to an isotherm was published by Freundlich and Kuster (1906) and is a purely empirical formula for gaseous adsorbates:

 

where   is the mass of adsorbate adsorbed,   is the mass of the adsorbent,   is the pressure of adsorbate (this can be changed to concentration if investigating solution rather than gas), and   and   are empirical constants for each adsorbent–adsorbate pair at a given temperature. The function is not adequate at very high pressure because in reality   has an asymptotic maximum as pressure increases without bound. As the temperature increases, the constants   and   change to reflect the empirical observation that the quantity adsorbed rises more slowly and higher pressures are required to saturate the surface.

Langmuir edit

Irving Langmuir was the first to derive a scientifically based adsorption isotherm in 1918.[12] The model applies to gases adsorbed on solid surfaces. It is a semi-empirical isotherm with a kinetic basis and was derived based on statistical thermodynamics. It is the most common isotherm equation to use due to its simplicity and its ability to fit a variety of adsorption data. It is based on four assumptions:

  1. All of the adsorption sites are equivalent, and each site can only accommodate one molecule.
  2. The surface is energetically homogeneous, and adsorbed molecules do not interact.
  3. There are no phase transitions.
  4. At the maximum adsorption, only a monolayer is formed. Adsorption only occurs on localized sites on the surface, not with other adsorbates.

These four assumptions are seldom all true: there are always imperfections on the surface, adsorbed molecules are not necessarily inert, and the mechanism is clearly not the same for the very first molecules to adsorb to a surface as for the last. The fourth condition is the most troublesome, as frequently more molecules will adsorb to the monolayer; this problem is addressed by the BET isotherm for relatively flat (non-microporous) surfaces. The Langmuir isotherm is nonetheless the first choice for most models of adsorption and has many applications in surface kinetics (usually called Langmuir–Hinshelwood kinetics) and thermodynamics.

Langmuir suggested that adsorption takes place through this mechanism:  , where A is a gas molecule, and S is an adsorption site. The direct and inverse rate constants are k and k−1. If we define surface coverage,  , as the fraction of the adsorption sites occupied, in the equilibrium we have:

 

or

 

where   is the partial pressure of the gas or the molar concentration of the solution. For very low pressures  , and for high pressures  .

The value of   is difficult to measure experimentally; usually, the adsorbate is a gas and the quantity adsorbed is given in moles, grams, or gas volumes at standard temperature and pressure (STP) per gram of adsorbent. If we call vmon the STP volume of adsorbate required to form a monolayer on the adsorbent (per gram of adsorbent), then  , and we obtain an expression for a straight line:

 

Through its slope and y intercept we can obtain vmon and K, which are constants for each adsorbent–adsorbate pair at a given temperature. vmon is related to the number of adsorption sites through the ideal gas law. If we assume that the number of sites is just the whole area of the solid divided into the cross section of the adsorbate molecules, we can easily calculate the surface area of the adsorbent. The surface area of an adsorbent depends on its structure: the more pores it has, the greater the area, which has a big influence on reactions on surfaces.

If more than one gas adsorbs on the surface, we define   as the fraction of empty sites, and we have:

 

Also, we can define   as the fraction of the sites occupied by the j-th gas:

 

where i is each one of the gases that adsorb.

Note:

1) To choose between the Langmuir and Freundlich equations, the enthalpies of adsorption must be investigated.[13] While the Langmuir model assumes that the energy of adsorption remains constant with surface occupancy, the Freundlich equation is derived with the assumption that the heat of adsorption continually decrease as the binding sites are occupied.[14] The choice of the model based on best fitting of the data is a common misconception.[13]

2) The use of the linearized form of the Langmuir model is no longer common practice. Advances in computational power allowed for nonlinear regression to be performed quickly and with higher confidence since no data transformation is required.

BET edit

Often molecules do form multilayers, that is, some are adsorbed on already adsorbed molecules, and the Langmuir isotherm is not valid. In 1938 Stephen Brunauer, Paul Emmett, and Edward Teller developed a model isotherm that takes that possibility into account. Their theory is called BET theory, after the initials in their last names. They modified Langmuir's mechanism as follows:

A(g) + S ⇌ AS,
A(g) + AS ⇌ A2S,
A(g) + A2S ⇌ A3S and so on.
 
Langmuir (blue) and BET (red) isotherms

The derivation of the formula is more complicated than Langmuir's (see links for complete derivation). We obtain:

 

where x is the pressure divided by the vapor pressure for the adsorbate at that temperature (usually denoted  ), v is the STP volume of adsorbed adsorbate, vmon is the STP volume of the amount of adsorbate required to form a monolayer, and c is the equilibrium constant K we used in Langmuir isotherm multiplied by the vapor pressure of the adsorbate. The key assumption used in deriving the BET equation that the successive heats of adsorption for all layers except the first are equal to the heat of condensation of the adsorbate.

The Langmuir isotherm is usually better for chemisorption, and the BET isotherm works better for physisorption for non-microporous surfaces.

Kisliuk edit

 
Two adsorbate nitrogen molecules adsorbing onto a tungsten adsorbent from the precursor state around an island of previously adsorbed adsorbate (left) and via random adsorption (right)

In other instances, molecular interactions between gas molecules previously adsorbed on a solid surface form significant interactions with gas molecules in the gaseous phases. Hence, adsorption of gas molecules to the surface is more likely to occur around gas molecules that are already present on the solid surface, rendering the Langmuir adsorption isotherm ineffective for the purposes of modelling. This effect was studied in a system where nitrogen was the adsorbate and tungsten was the adsorbent by Paul Kisliuk (1922–2008) in 1957.[15] To compensate for the increased probability of adsorption occurring around molecules present on the substrate surface, Kisliuk developed the precursor state theory, whereby molecules would enter a precursor state at the interface between the solid adsorbent and adsorbate in the gaseous phase. From here, adsorbate molecules would either adsorb to the adsorbent or desorb into the gaseous phase. The probability of adsorption occurring from the precursor state is dependent on the adsorbate's proximity to other adsorbate molecules that have already been adsorbed. If the adsorbate molecule in the precursor state is in close proximity to an adsorbate molecule that has already formed on the surface, it has a sticking probability reflected by the size of the SE constant and will either be adsorbed from the precursor state at a rate of kEC or will desorb into the gaseous phase at a rate of kES. If an adsorbate molecule enters the precursor state at a location that is remote from any other previously adsorbed adsorbate molecules, the sticking probability is reflected by the size of the SD constant.

These factors were included as part of a single constant termed a "sticking coefficient", kE, described below:

 

As SD is dictated by factors that are taken into account by the Langmuir model, SD can be assumed to be the adsorption rate constant. However, the rate constant for the Kisliuk model (R’) is different from that of the Langmuir model, as R’ is used to represent the impact of diffusion on monolayer formation and is proportional to the square root of the system's diffusion coefficient. The Kisliuk adsorption isotherm is written as follows, where θ(t) is fractional coverage of the adsorbent with adsorbate, and t is immersion time:

 

Solving for θ(t) yields:

 

Adsorption enthalpy edit

Adsorption constants are equilibrium constants, therefore they obey the Van 't Hoff equation:

 

As can be seen in the formula, the variation of K must be isosteric, that is, at constant coverage. If we start from the BET isotherm and assume that the entropy change is the same for liquefaction and adsorption, we obtain

 

that is to say, adsorption is more exothermic than liquefaction.

Single-molecule explanation edit

The adsorption of ensemble molecules on a surface or interface can be divided into two processes: adsorption and desorption. If the adsorption rate wins the desorption rate, the molecules will accumulate over time giving the adsorption curve over time. If the desorption rate is larger, the number of molecules on the surface will decrease over time. The adsorption rate is dependent on the temperature, the diffusion rate of the solute (related to mean free path for pure gas), and the energy barrier between the molecule and the surface. The diffusion and key elements of the adsorption rate can be calculated using Fick's laws of diffusion and Einstein relation (kinetic theory). Under ideal conditions, when there is no energy barrier and all molecules that diffuse and collide with the surface get adsorbed, the number of molecules adsorbed   at a surface of area   on an infinite area surface can be directly integrated from Fick's second law differential equation to be:[16]

 

where   is the surface area (unit m2),   is the number concentration of the molecule in the bulk solution (unit #/m3),   is the diffusion constant (unit m2/s), and   is time (unit s). Further simulations and analysis of this equation[17] show that the square root dependence on the time is originated from the decrease of the concentrations near the surface under ideal adsorption conditions. Also, this equation only works for the beginning of the adsorption when a well-behaved concentration gradient forms near the surface. Correction on the reduction of the adsorption area and slowing down of the concentration gradient evolution have to be considered over a longer time.[18] Under real experimental conditions, the flow and the small adsorption area always make the adsorption rate faster than what this equation predicted, and the energy barrier will either accelerate this rate by surface attraction or slow it down by surface repulsion. Thus, the prediction from this equation is often a few to several orders of magnitude away from the experimental results. Under special cases, such as a very small adsorption area on a large surface, and under chemical equilibrium when there is no concentration gradience near the surface, this equation becomes useful to predict the adsorption rate with debatable special care to determine a specific value of   in a particular measurement.[17]

The desorption of a molecule from the surface depends on the binding energy of the molecule to the surface and the temperature. The typical overall adsorption rate is thus often a combined result of the adsorption and desorption.

Quantum mechanical – thermodynamic modelling for surface area and porosity edit

Since 1980 two theories were worked on to explain adsorption and obtain equations that work. These two are referred to as the chi hypothesis, the quantum mechanical derivation, and excess surface work (ESW).[19] Both these theories yield the same equation for flat surfaces:

 

where U is the unit step function. The definitions of the other symbols is as follows:

 

where "ads" stands for "adsorbed", "m" stands for "monolayer equivalence" and "vap" is reference to the vapor pressure of the liquid adsorptive at the same temperature as the solid sample. The unit function creates the definition of the molar energy of adsorption for the first adsorbed molecule by:

 

The plot of   adsorbed versus   is referred to as the chi plot. For flat surfaces, the slope of the chi plot yields the surface area. Empirically, this plot was noticed as being a very good fit to the isotherm by Michael Polanyi[20][21][22] and also by Jan Hendrik de Boer and Cornelis Zwikker[23] but not pursued. This was due to criticism in the former case by Albert Einstein and in the latter case by Brunauer. This flat surface equation may be used as a "standard curve" in the normal tradition of comparison curves, with the exception that the porous sample's early portion of the plot of   versus   acts as a self-standard. Ultramicroporous, microporous and mesoporous conditions may be analyzed using this technique. Typical standard deviations for full isotherm fits including porous samples are less than 2%.

Notice that in this description of physical adsorption, the entropy of adsorption is consistent with the Dubinin thermodynamic criterion, that is the entropy of adsorption from the liquid state to the adsorbed state is approximately zero.

Adsorbents edit

Characteristics and general requirements edit

 
Activated carbon is used as an adsorbent

Adsorbents are used usually in the form of spherical pellets, rods, moldings, or monoliths with a hydrodynamic radius between 0.25 and 5 mm. They must have high abrasion resistance, high thermal stability and small pore diameters, which results in higher exposed surface area and hence high capacity for adsorption. The adsorbents must also have a distinct pore structure that enables fast transport of the gaseous vapors.[24] Most industrial adsorbents fall into one of three classes:

  • Oxygen-containing compounds – Are typically hydrophilic and polar, including materials such as silica gel, limestone (calcium carbonate)[25] and zeolites.
  • Carbon-based compounds – Are typically hydrophobic and non-polar, including materials such as activated carbon and graphite.
  • Polymer-based compounds – Are polar or non-polar, depending on the functional groups in the polymer matrix.

Silica gel edit

 
Silica gel adsorber for NO2, Fixed Nitrogen Research Laboratory, ca.1930s

Silica gel is a chemically inert, non-toxic, polar and dimensionally stable (< 400 °C or 750 °F) amorphous form of SiO2. It is prepared by the reaction between sodium silicate and acetic acid, which is followed by a series of after-treatment processes such as aging, pickling, etc. These after-treatment methods results in various pore size distributions.

Silica is used for drying of process air (e.g. oxygen, natural gas) and adsorption of heavy (polar) hydrocarbons from natural gas.

Zeolites edit

Zeolites are natural or synthetic crystalline aluminosilicates, which have a repeating pore network and release water at high temperature. Zeolites are polar in nature.

They are manufactured by hydrothermal synthesis of sodium aluminosilicate or another silica source in an autoclave followed by ion exchange with certain cations (Na+, Li+, Ca2+, K+, NH4+). The channel diameter of zeolite cages usually ranges from 2 to 9 Å. The ion exchange process is followed by drying of the crystals, which can be pelletized with a binder to form macroporous pellets.

Zeolites are applied in drying of process air, CO2 removal from natural gas, CO removal from reforming gas, air separation, catalytic cracking, and catalytic synthesis and reforming.

Non-polar (siliceous) zeolites are synthesized from aluminum-free silica sources or by dealumination of aluminum-containing zeolites. The dealumination process is done by treating the zeolite with steam at elevated temperatures, typically greater than 500 °C (930 °F). This high temperature heat treatment breaks the aluminum-oxygen bonds and the aluminum atom is expelled from the zeolite framework.

Activated carbon edit

Activated carbon is a highly porous, amorphous solid consisting of microcrystallites with a graphite lattice, usually prepared in small pellets or a powder. It is non-polar and cheap. One of its main drawbacks is that it reacts with oxygen at moderate temperatures (over 300 °C).

 
Activated carbon nitrogen isotherm showing a marked microporous type I behavior

Activated carbon can be manufactured from carbonaceous material, including coal (bituminous, subbituminous, and lignite), peat, wood, or nutshells (e.g., coconut). The manufacturing process consists of two phases, carbonization and activation.[26][27] The carbonization process includes drying and then heating to separate by-products, including tars and other hydrocarbons from the raw material, as well as to drive off any gases generated. The process is completed by heating the material over 400 °C (750 °F) in an oxygen-free atmosphere that cannot support combustion. The carbonized particles are then "activated" by exposing them to an oxidizing agent, usually steam or carbon dioxide at high temperature. This agent burns off the pore blocking structures created during the carbonization phase and so, they develop a porous, three-dimensional graphite lattice structure. The size of the pores developed during activation is a function of the time that they spend in this stage. Longer exposure times result in larger pore sizes. The most popular aqueous phase carbons are bituminous based because of their hardness, abrasion resistance, pore size distribution, and low cost, but their effectiveness needs to be tested in each application to determine the optimal product.

Activated carbon is used for adsorption of organic substances[28] and non-polar adsorbates and it is also usually used for waste gas (and waste water) treatment. It is the most widely used adsorbent since most of its chemical (e.g. surface groups) and physical properties (e.g. pore size distribution and surface area) can be tuned according to what is needed.[29] Its usefulness also derives from its large micropore (and sometimes mesopore) volume and the resulting high surface area. Recent research works reported activated carbon as an effective agent to adsorb cationic species of toxic metals from multi-pollutant systems and also proposed possible adsorption mechanisms with supporting evidences.[30]

Water adsorption edit

The adsorption of water at surfaces is of broad importance in chemical engineering, materials science and catalysis. Also termed surface hydration, the presence of physically or chemically adsorbed water at the surfaces of solids plays an important role in governing interface properties, chemical reaction pathways and catalytic performance in a wide range of systems. In the case of physically adsorbed water, surface hydration can be eliminated simply through drying at conditions of temperature and pressure allowing full vaporization of water. For chemically adsorbed water, hydration may be in the form of either dissociative adsorption, where H2O molecules are dissociated into surface adsorbed -H and -OH, or molecular adsorption (associative adsorption) where individual water molecules remain intact [31]

Adsorption solar heating and storage edit

The low cost ($200/ton) and high cycle rate (2,000 ×) of synthetic zeolites such as Linde 13X with water adsorbate has garnered much academic and commercial interest recently for use for thermal energy storage (TES), specifically of low-grade solar and waste heat. Several pilot projects have been funded in the EU from 2000 to the present (2020).[citation needed] The basic concept is to store solar thermal energy as chemical latent energy in the zeolite. Typically, hot dry air from flat plate solar collectors is made to flow through a bed of zeolite such that any water adsorbate present is driven off. Storage can be diurnal, weekly, monthly, or even seasonal depending on the volume of the zeolite and the area of the solar thermal panels. When heat is called for during the night, or sunless hours, or winter, humidified air flows through the zeolite. As the humidity is adsorbed by the zeolite, heat is released to the air and subsequently to the building space. This form of TES, with specific use of zeolites, was first taught by John Guerra in 1978.[32]

Carbon capture and storage edit

Typical adsorbents proposed for carbon capture and storage are zeolites and MOFs.[33] The customization of adsorbents makes them a potentially attractive alternative to absorption. Because adsorbents can be regenerated by temperature or pressure swing, this step can be less energy intensive than absorption regeneration methods.[34] Major problems that are present with adsorption cost in carbon capture are: regenerating the adsorbent, mass ratio, solvent/MOF, cost of adsorbent, production of the adsorbent, lifetime of adsorbent.[35]

In sorption enhanced water gas shift (SEWGS) technology a pre-combustion carbon capture process, based on solid adsorption, is combined with the water gas shift reaction (WGS) in order to produce a high pressure hydrogen stream.[36] The CO2 stream produced can be stored or used for other industrial processes.[37]

Protein and surfactant adsorption edit

Protein adsorption is a process that has a fundamental role in the field of biomaterials. Indeed, biomaterial surfaces in contact with biological media, such as blood or serum, are immediately coated by proteins. Therefore, living cells do not interact directly with the biomaterial surface, but with the adsorbed proteins layer. This protein layer mediates the interaction between biomaterials and cells, translating biomaterial physical and chemical properties into a "biological language".[38] In fact, cell membrane receptors bind to protein layer bioactive sites and these receptor-protein binding events are transduced, through the cell membrane, in a manner that stimulates specific intracellular processes that then determine cell adhesion, shape, growth and differentiation. Protein adsorption is influenced by many surface properties such as surface wettability, surface chemical composition [39] and surface nanometre-scale morphology.[40] Surfactant adsorption is a similar phenomenon, but utilising surfactant molecules in the place of proteins.[41]

Adsorption chillers edit

 
A schematic diagram of an adsorption chiller: (1) heat is lost through evaporation of refrigerant, (2) refrigerant vapour is adsorbed onto the solid medium, (3) refrigerant is desorbed from the solid medium section not in use, (4) refrigerant is condensed and returned to the start, (5) & (6) solid medium is cycled between adsorption and desorption to regenerate it.

Combining an adsorbent with a refrigerant, adsorption chillers use heat to provide a cooling effect. This heat, in the form of hot water, may come from any number of industrial sources including waste heat from industrial processes, prime heat from solar thermal installations or from the exhaust or water jacket heat of a piston engine or turbine.

Although there are similarities between adsorption chillers and absorption refrigeration, the former is based on the interaction between gases and solids. The adsorption chamber of the chiller is filled with a solid material (for example zeolite, silica gel, alumina, active carbon or certain types of metal salts), which in its neutral state has adsorbed the refrigerant. When heated, the solid desorbs (releases) refrigerant vapour, which subsequently is cooled and liquefied. This liquid refrigerant then provides a cooling effect at the evaporator from its enthalpy of vaporization. In the final stage the refrigerant vapour is (re)adsorbed into the solid.[42] As an adsorption chiller requires no compressor, it is relatively quiet.

Portal site mediated adsorption edit

Portal site mediated adsorption is a model for site-selective activated gas adsorption in metallic catalytic systems that contain a variety of different adsorption sites. In such systems, low-coordination "edge and corner" defect-like sites can exhibit significantly lower adsorption enthalpies than high-coordination (basal plane) sites. As a result, these sites can serve as "portals" for very rapid adsorption to the rest of the surface. The phenomenon relies on the common "spillover" effect (described below), where certain adsorbed species exhibit high mobility on some surfaces. The model explains seemingly inconsistent observations of gas adsorption thermodynamics and kinetics in catalytic systems where surfaces can exist in a range of coordination structures, and it has been successfully applied to bimetallic catalytic systems where synergistic activity is observed.

In contrast to pure spillover, portal site adsorption refers to surface diffusion to adjacent adsorption sites, not to non-adsorptive support surfaces.

The model appears to have been first proposed for carbon monoxide on silica-supported platinum by Brandt et al. (1993).[43] A similar, but independent model was developed by King and co-workers[44][45][46] to describe hydrogen adsorption on silica-supported alkali promoted ruthenium, silver-ruthenium and copper-ruthenium bimetallic catalysts. The same group applied the model to CO hydrogenation (Fischer–Tropsch synthesis).[47] Zupanc et al. (2002) subsequently confirmed the same model for hydrogen adsorption on magnesia-supported caesium-ruthenium bimetallic catalysts.[48] Trens et al. (2009) have similarly described CO surface diffusion on carbon-supported Pt particles of varying morphology.[49]

Adsorption spillover edit

In the case catalytic or adsorbent systems where a metal species is dispersed upon a support (or carrier) material (often quasi-inert oxides, such as alumina or silica), it is possible for an adsorptive species to indirectly adsorb to the support surface under conditions where such adsorption is thermodynamically unfavorable. The presence of the metal serves as a lower-energy pathway for gaseous species to first adsorb to the metal and then diffuse on the support surface. This is possible because the adsorbed species attains a lower energy state once it has adsorbed to the metal, thus lowering the activation barrier between the gas phase species and the support-adsorbed species.

Hydrogen spillover is the most common example of an adsorptive spillover. In the case of hydrogen, adsorption is most often accompanied with dissociation of molecular hydrogen (H2) to atomic hydrogen (H), followed by spillover of the hydrogen atoms present.

The spillover effect has been used to explain many observations in heterogeneous catalysis and adsorption.[50]

Polymer adsorption edit

Adsorption of molecules onto polymer surfaces is central to a number of applications, including development of non-stick coatings and in various biomedical devices. Polymers may also be adsorbed to surfaces through polyelectrolyte adsorption.

In viruses edit

Adsorption is the first step in the viral life cycle. The next steps are penetration, uncoating, synthesis (transcription if needed, and translation), and release. The virus replication cycle, in this respect, is similar for all types of viruses. Factors such as transcription may or may not be needed if the virus is able to integrate its genomic information in the cell's nucleus, or if the virus can replicate itself directly within the cell's cytoplasm.

In popular culture edit

The game of Tetris is a puzzle game in which blocks of 4 are adsorbed onto a surface during game play. Scientists have used Tetris blocks "as a proxy for molecules with a complex shape" and their "adsorption on a flat surface" for studying the thermodynamics of nanoparticles.[51][52]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Cussler, E. L. (1997). Diffusion: Mass Transfer in Fluid Systems (2nd ed.). New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 308–330. ISBN 978-0-521-45078-2.

External links edit

  • Derivation of Langmuir and BET isotherms, at JHU.edu
  • , at MEGTEC.com

adsorption, confused, with, absorption, also, physisorption, chemisorption, segregation, materials, science, adhesion, atoms, ions, molecules, from, liquid, dissolved, solid, surface, this, process, creates, film, adsorbate, surface, adsorbent, this, process, . Not to be confused with Absorption See also Physisorption Chemisorption and Segregation materials science Adsorption is the adhesion 1 of atoms ions or molecules from a gas liquid or dissolved solid to a surface 2 This process creates a film of the adsorbate on the surface of the adsorbent This process differs from absorption in which a fluid the absorbate is dissolved by or permeates a liquid or solid the absorbent 3 While adsorption does often precede absorption which involves the transfer of the absorbate into the volume of the absorbent material alternatively adsorption is distinctly a surface phenomenon wherein the adsorbate does not penetrate through the material surface and into the bulk of the adsorbent 4 The term sorption encompasses both adsorption and absorption and desorption is the reverse of sorption Brunauer Emmett and Teller s model of multilayer adsorption is a random distribution of molecules on the material surface https doi org 10 1351 goldbook A00155 Like surface tension adsorption is a consequence of surface energy In a bulk material all the bonding requirements be they ionic covalent or metallic of the constituent atoms of the material are fulfilled by other atoms in the material However atoms on the surface of the adsorbent are not wholly surrounded by other adsorbent atoms and therefore can attract adsorbates The exact nature of the bonding depends on the details of the species involved but the adsorption process is generally classified as physisorption characteristic of weak van der Waals forces or chemisorption characteristic of covalent bonding It may also occur due to electrostatic attraction 5 6 The nature of the adsorption can affect the structure of the adsorbed species For example polymer physisorption from solution can result in squashed structures on a surface 7 Adsorption is present in many natural physical biological and chemical systems and is widely used in industrial applications such as heterogeneous catalysts 8 9 activated charcoal capturing and using waste heat to provide cold water for air conditioning and other process requirements adsorption chillers synthetic resins increasing storage capacity of carbide derived carbons and water purification Adsorption ion exchange and chromatography are sorption processes in which certain adsorbates are selectively transferred from the fluid phase to the surface of insoluble rigid particles suspended in a vessel or packed in a column Pharmaceutical industry applications which use adsorption as a means to prolong neurological exposure to specific drugs or parts thereof citation needed are lesser known The word adsorption was coined in 1881 by German physicist Heinrich Kayser 1853 1940 10 Contents 1 Isotherms 1 1 Freundlich 1 2 Langmuir 1 3 BET 1 4 Kisliuk 1 5 Adsorption enthalpy 1 6 Single molecule explanation 2 Quantum mechanical thermodynamic modelling for surface area and porosity 3 Adsorbents 3 1 Characteristics and general requirements 3 2 Silica gel 3 3 Zeolites 3 4 Activated carbon 4 Water adsorption 5 Adsorption solar heating and storage 6 Carbon capture and storage 7 Protein and surfactant adsorption 8 Adsorption chillers 9 Portal site mediated adsorption 10 Adsorption spillover 11 Polymer adsorption 12 In viruses 13 In popular culture 14 See also 15 References 16 Further reading 17 External linksIsotherms editThe adsorption of gases and solutes is usually described through isotherms that is the amount of adsorbate on the adsorbent as a function of its pressure if gas or concentration for liquid phase solutes at constant temperature The quantity adsorbed is nearly always normalized by the mass of the adsorbent to allow comparison of different materials To date 15 different isotherm models have been developed 11 Freundlich edit Main article Freundlich equation The first mathematical fit to an isotherm was published by Freundlich and Kuster 1906 and is a purely empirical formula for gaseous adsorbates x m k P 1 n displaystyle frac x m kP 1 n nbsp where x displaystyle x nbsp is the mass of adsorbate adsorbed m displaystyle m nbsp is the mass of the adsorbent P displaystyle P nbsp is the pressure of adsorbate this can be changed to concentration if investigating solution rather than gas and k displaystyle k nbsp and n displaystyle n nbsp are empirical constants for each adsorbent adsorbate pair at a given temperature The function is not adequate at very high pressure because in reality x m displaystyle x m nbsp has an asymptotic maximum as pressure increases without bound As the temperature increases the constants k displaystyle k nbsp and n displaystyle n nbsp change to reflect the empirical observation that the quantity adsorbed rises more slowly and higher pressures are required to saturate the surface Langmuir edit See also Langmuir equation Irving Langmuir was the first to derive a scientifically based adsorption isotherm in 1918 12 The model applies to gases adsorbed on solid surfaces It is a semi empirical isotherm with a kinetic basis and was derived based on statistical thermodynamics It is the most common isotherm equation to use due to its simplicity and its ability to fit a variety of adsorption data It is based on four assumptions All of the adsorption sites are equivalent and each site can only accommodate one molecule The surface is energetically homogeneous and adsorbed molecules do not interact There are no phase transitions At the maximum adsorption only a monolayer is formed Adsorption only occurs on localized sites on the surface not with other adsorbates These four assumptions are seldom all true there are always imperfections on the surface adsorbed molecules are not necessarily inert and the mechanism is clearly not the same for the very first molecules to adsorb to a surface as for the last The fourth condition is the most troublesome as frequently more molecules will adsorb to the monolayer this problem is addressed by the BET isotherm for relatively flat non microporous surfaces The Langmuir isotherm is nonetheless the first choice for most models of adsorption and has many applications in surface kinetics usually called Langmuir Hinshelwood kinetics and thermodynamics Langmuir suggested that adsorption takes place through this mechanism A g S A S displaystyle A text g S rightleftharpoons AS nbsp where A is a gas molecule and S is an adsorption site The direct and inverse rate constants are k and k 1 If we define surface coverage 8 displaystyle theta nbsp as the fraction of the adsorption sites occupied in the equilibrium we have K k k 1 8 1 8 P displaystyle K frac k k 1 frac theta 1 theta P nbsp or 8 K P 1 K P displaystyle theta frac KP 1 KP nbsp where P displaystyle P nbsp is the partial pressure of the gas or the molar concentration of the solution For very low pressures 8 K P displaystyle theta approx KP nbsp and for high pressures 8 1 displaystyle theta approx 1 nbsp The value of 8 displaystyle theta nbsp is difficult to measure experimentally usually the adsorbate is a gas and the quantity adsorbed is given in moles grams or gas volumes at standard temperature and pressure STP per gram of adsorbent If we call vmon the STP volume of adsorbate required to form a monolayer on the adsorbent per gram of adsorbent then 8 v v mon displaystyle theta frac v v text mon nbsp and we obtain an expression for a straight line 1 v 1 K v mon 1 P 1 v mon displaystyle frac 1 v frac 1 Kv text mon frac 1 P frac 1 v text mon nbsp Through its slope and y intercept we can obtain vmon and K which are constants for each adsorbent adsorbate pair at a given temperature vmon is related to the number of adsorption sites through the ideal gas law If we assume that the number of sites is just the whole area of the solid divided into the cross section of the adsorbate molecules we can easily calculate the surface area of the adsorbent The surface area of an adsorbent depends on its structure the more pores it has the greater the area which has a big influence on reactions on surfaces If more than one gas adsorbs on the surface we define 8 E displaystyle theta E nbsp as the fraction of empty sites and we have 8 E 1 1 i 1 n K i P i displaystyle theta E dfrac 1 1 sum i 1 n K i P i nbsp Also we can define 8 j displaystyle theta j nbsp as the fraction of the sites occupied by the j th gas 8 j K j P j 1 i 1 n K i P i displaystyle theta j dfrac K j P j 1 sum i 1 n K i P i nbsp where i is each one of the gases that adsorb Note 1 To choose between the Langmuir and Freundlich equations the enthalpies of adsorption must be investigated 13 While the Langmuir model assumes that the energy of adsorption remains constant with surface occupancy the Freundlich equation is derived with the assumption that the heat of adsorption continually decrease as the binding sites are occupied 14 The choice of the model based on best fitting of the data is a common misconception 13 2 The use of the linearized form of the Langmuir model is no longer common practice Advances in computational power allowed for nonlinear regression to be performed quickly and with higher confidence since no data transformation is required BET edit Main article BET theory Often molecules do form multilayers that is some are adsorbed on already adsorbed molecules and the Langmuir isotherm is not valid In 1938 Stephen Brunauer Paul Emmett and Edward Teller developed a model isotherm that takes that possibility into account Their theory is called BET theory after the initials in their last names They modified Langmuir s mechanism as follows A g S AS A g AS A2S A g A2S A3S and so on nbsp Langmuir blue and BET red isothermsThe derivation of the formula is more complicated than Langmuir s see links for complete derivation We obtain x v 1 x 1 v mon c x c 1 v mon c displaystyle frac x v 1 x frac 1 v text mon c frac x c 1 v text mon c nbsp where x is the pressure divided by the vapor pressure for the adsorbate at that temperature usually denoted P P 0 displaystyle P P 0 nbsp v is the STP volume of adsorbed adsorbate vmon is the STP volume of the amount of adsorbate required to form a monolayer and c is the equilibrium constant K we used in Langmuir isotherm multiplied by the vapor pressure of the adsorbate The key assumption used in deriving the BET equation that the successive heats of adsorption for all layers except the first are equal to the heat of condensation of the adsorbate The Langmuir isotherm is usually better for chemisorption and the BET isotherm works better for physisorption for non microporous surfaces Kisliuk edit nbsp Two adsorbate nitrogen molecules adsorbing onto a tungsten adsorbent from the precursor state around an island of previously adsorbed adsorbate left and via random adsorption right In other instances molecular interactions between gas molecules previously adsorbed on a solid surface form significant interactions with gas molecules in the gaseous phases Hence adsorption of gas molecules to the surface is more likely to occur around gas molecules that are already present on the solid surface rendering the Langmuir adsorption isotherm ineffective for the purposes of modelling This effect was studied in a system where nitrogen was the adsorbate and tungsten was the adsorbent by Paul Kisliuk 1922 2008 in 1957 15 To compensate for the increased probability of adsorption occurring around molecules present on the substrate surface Kisliuk developed the precursor state theory whereby molecules would enter a precursor state at the interface between the solid adsorbent and adsorbate in the gaseous phase From here adsorbate molecules would either adsorb to the adsorbent or desorb into the gaseous phase The probability of adsorption occurring from the precursor state is dependent on the adsorbate s proximity to other adsorbate molecules that have already been adsorbed If the adsorbate molecule in the precursor state is in close proximity to an adsorbate molecule that has already formed on the surface it has a sticking probability reflected by the size of the SE constant and will either be adsorbed from the precursor state at a rate of kEC or will desorb into the gaseous phase at a rate of kES If an adsorbate molecule enters the precursor state at a location that is remote from any other previously adsorbed adsorbate molecules the sticking probability is reflected by the size of the SD constant These factors were included as part of a single constant termed a sticking coefficient kE described below k E S E k ES S D displaystyle k text E frac S text E k text ES S text D nbsp As SD is dictated by factors that are taken into account by the Langmuir model SD can be assumed to be the adsorption rate constant However the rate constant for the Kisliuk model R is different from that of the Langmuir model as R is used to represent the impact of diffusion on monolayer formation and is proportional to the square root of the system s diffusion coefficient The Kisliuk adsorption isotherm is written as follows where 8 t is fractional coverage of the adsorbent with adsorbate and t is immersion time d 8 t d t R 1 8 1 k E 8 displaystyle frac d theta t dt R 1 theta 1 k text E theta nbsp Solving for 8 t yields 8 t 1 e R 1 k E t 1 k E e R 1 k E t displaystyle theta t frac 1 e R 1 k text E t 1 k text E e R 1 k text E t nbsp Adsorption enthalpy edit Adsorption constants are equilibrium constants therefore they obey the Van t Hoff equation ln K 1 T 8 D H R displaystyle left frac partial ln K partial frac 1 T right theta frac Delta H R nbsp As can be seen in the formula the variation of K must be isosteric that is at constant coverage If we start from the BET isotherm and assume that the entropy change is the same for liquefaction and adsorption we obtain D H ads D H liq R T ln c displaystyle Delta H text ads Delta H text liq RT ln c nbsp that is to say adsorption is more exothermic than liquefaction Single molecule explanation edit The adsorption of ensemble molecules on a surface or interface can be divided into two processes adsorption and desorption If the adsorption rate wins the desorption rate the molecules will accumulate over time giving the adsorption curve over time If the desorption rate is larger the number of molecules on the surface will decrease over time The adsorption rate is dependent on the temperature the diffusion rate of the solute related to mean free path for pure gas and the energy barrier between the molecule and the surface The diffusion and key elements of the adsorption rate can be calculated using Fick s laws of diffusion and Einstein relation kinetic theory Under ideal conditions when there is no energy barrier and all molecules that diffuse and collide with the surface get adsorbed the number of molecules adsorbed G displaystyle Gamma nbsp at a surface of area A displaystyle A nbsp on an infinite area surface can be directly integrated from Fick s second law differential equation to be 16 G 2 A C D t p displaystyle Gamma 2AC sqrt frac Dt pi nbsp where A displaystyle A nbsp is the surface area unit m2 C displaystyle C nbsp is the number concentration of the molecule in the bulk solution unit m3 D displaystyle D nbsp is the diffusion constant unit m2 s and t displaystyle t nbsp is time unit s Further simulations and analysis of this equation 17 show that the square root dependence on the time is originated from the decrease of the concentrations near the surface under ideal adsorption conditions Also this equation only works for the beginning of the adsorption when a well behaved concentration gradient forms near the surface Correction on the reduction of the adsorption area and slowing down of the concentration gradient evolution have to be considered over a longer time 18 Under real experimental conditions the flow and the small adsorption area always make the adsorption rate faster than what this equation predicted and the energy barrier will either accelerate this rate by surface attraction or slow it down by surface repulsion Thus the prediction from this equation is often a few to several orders of magnitude away from the experimental results Under special cases such as a very small adsorption area on a large surface and under chemical equilibrium when there is no concentration gradience near the surface this equation becomes useful to predict the adsorption rate with debatable special care to determine a specific value of t displaystyle t nbsp in a particular measurement 17 The desorption of a molecule from the surface depends on the binding energy of the molecule to the surface and the temperature The typical overall adsorption rate is thus often a combined result of the adsorption and desorption Quantum mechanical thermodynamic modelling for surface area and porosity editSince 1980 two theories were worked on to explain adsorption and obtain equations that work These two are referred to as the chi hypothesis the quantum mechanical derivation and excess surface work ESW 19 Both these theories yield the same equation for flat surfaces 8 x x c U x x c displaystyle theta chi chi c U chi chi c nbsp where U is the unit step function The definitions of the other symbols is as follows 8 n ads n m x ln ln P P vap displaystyle theta n text ads n m quad chi ln bigl ln bigl P P text vap bigr bigr nbsp where ads stands for adsorbed m stands for monolayer equivalence and vap is reference to the vapor pressure of the liquid adsorptive at the same temperature as the solid sample The unit function creates the definition of the molar energy of adsorption for the first adsorbed molecule by x c ln E a R T displaystyle chi c ln bigl E a RT bigr nbsp The plot of n a d s displaystyle n ads nbsp adsorbed versus x displaystyle chi nbsp is referred to as the chi plot For flat surfaces the slope of the chi plot yields the surface area Empirically this plot was noticed as being a very good fit to the isotherm by Michael Polanyi 20 21 22 and also by Jan Hendrik de Boer and Cornelis Zwikker 23 but not pursued This was due to criticism in the former case by Albert Einstein and in the latter case by Brunauer This flat surface equation may be used as a standard curve in the normal tradition of comparison curves with the exception that the porous sample s early portion of the plot of n a d s displaystyle n ads nbsp versus x displaystyle chi nbsp acts as a self standard Ultramicroporous microporous and mesoporous conditions may be analyzed using this technique Typical standard deviations for full isotherm fits including porous samples are less than 2 Notice that in this description of physical adsorption the entropy of adsorption is consistent with the Dubinin thermodynamic criterion that is the entropy of adsorption from the liquid state to the adsorbed state is approximately zero Adsorbents editCharacteristics and general requirements edit nbsp Activated carbon is used as an adsorbentAdsorbents are used usually in the form of spherical pellets rods moldings or monoliths with a hydrodynamic radius between 0 25 and 5 mm They must have high abrasion resistance high thermal stability and small pore diameters which results in higher exposed surface area and hence high capacity for adsorption The adsorbents must also have a distinct pore structure that enables fast transport of the gaseous vapors 24 Most industrial adsorbents fall into one of three classes Oxygen containing compounds Are typically hydrophilic and polar including materials such as silica gel limestone calcium carbonate 25 and zeolites Carbon based compounds Are typically hydrophobic and non polar including materials such as activated carbon and graphite Polymer based compounds Are polar or non polar depending on the functional groups in the polymer matrix Silica gel edit nbsp Silica gel adsorber for NO2 Fixed Nitrogen Research Laboratory ca 1930sSilica gel is a chemically inert non toxic polar and dimensionally stable lt 400 C or 750 F amorphous form of SiO2 It is prepared by the reaction between sodium silicate and acetic acid which is followed by a series of after treatment processes such as aging pickling etc These after treatment methods results in various pore size distributions Silica is used for drying of process air e g oxygen natural gas and adsorption of heavy polar hydrocarbons from natural gas Zeolites edit Zeolites are natural or synthetic crystalline aluminosilicates which have a repeating pore network and release water at high temperature Zeolites are polar in nature They are manufactured by hydrothermal synthesis of sodium aluminosilicate or another silica source in an autoclave followed by ion exchange with certain cations Na Li Ca2 K NH4 The channel diameter of zeolite cages usually ranges from 2 to 9 A The ion exchange process is followed by drying of the crystals which can be pelletized with a binder to form macroporous pellets Zeolites are applied in drying of process air CO2 removal from natural gas CO removal from reforming gas air separation catalytic cracking and catalytic synthesis and reforming Non polar siliceous zeolites are synthesized from aluminum free silica sources or by dealumination of aluminum containing zeolites The dealumination process is done by treating the zeolite with steam at elevated temperatures typically greater than 500 C 930 F This high temperature heat treatment breaks the aluminum oxygen bonds and the aluminum atom is expelled from the zeolite framework Activated carbon edit Activated carbon is a highly porous amorphous solid consisting of microcrystallites with a graphite lattice usually prepared in small pellets or a powder It is non polar and cheap One of its main drawbacks is that it reacts with oxygen at moderate temperatures over 300 C nbsp Activated carbon nitrogen isotherm showing a marked microporous type I behaviorActivated carbon can be manufactured from carbonaceous material including coal bituminous subbituminous and lignite peat wood or nutshells e g coconut The manufacturing process consists of two phases carbonization and activation 26 27 The carbonization process includes drying and then heating to separate by products including tars and other hydrocarbons from the raw material as well as to drive off any gases generated The process is completed by heating the material over 400 C 750 F in an oxygen free atmosphere that cannot support combustion The carbonized particles are then activated by exposing them to an oxidizing agent usually steam or carbon dioxide at high temperature This agent burns off the pore blocking structures created during the carbonization phase and so they develop a porous three dimensional graphite lattice structure The size of the pores developed during activation is a function of the time that they spend in this stage Longer exposure times result in larger pore sizes The most popular aqueous phase carbons are bituminous based because of their hardness abrasion resistance pore size distribution and low cost but their effectiveness needs to be tested in each application to determine the optimal product Activated carbon is used for adsorption of organic substances 28 and non polar adsorbates and it is also usually used for waste gas and waste water treatment It is the most widely used adsorbent since most of its chemical e g surface groups and physical properties e g pore size distribution and surface area can be tuned according to what is needed 29 Its usefulness also derives from its large micropore and sometimes mesopore volume and the resulting high surface area Recent research works reported activated carbon as an effective agent to adsorb cationic species of toxic metals from multi pollutant systems and also proposed possible adsorption mechanisms with supporting evidences 30 Water adsorption editThe adsorption of water at surfaces is of broad importance in chemical engineering materials science and catalysis Also termed surface hydration the presence of physically or chemically adsorbed water at the surfaces of solids plays an important role in governing interface properties chemical reaction pathways and catalytic performance in a wide range of systems In the case of physically adsorbed water surface hydration can be eliminated simply through drying at conditions of temperature and pressure allowing full vaporization of water For chemically adsorbed water hydration may be in the form of either dissociative adsorption where H2O molecules are dissociated into surface adsorbed H and OH or molecular adsorption associative adsorption where individual water molecules remain intact 31 Adsorption solar heating and storage editThe low cost 200 ton and high cycle rate 2 000 of synthetic zeolites such as Linde 13X with water adsorbate has garnered much academic and commercial interest recently for use for thermal energy storage TES specifically of low grade solar and waste heat Several pilot projects have been funded in the EU from 2000 to the present 2020 citation needed The basic concept is to store solar thermal energy as chemical latent energy in the zeolite Typically hot dry air from flat plate solar collectors is made to flow through a bed of zeolite such that any water adsorbate present is driven off Storage can be diurnal weekly monthly or even seasonal depending on the volume of the zeolite and the area of the solar thermal panels When heat is called for during the night or sunless hours or winter humidified air flows through the zeolite As the humidity is adsorbed by the zeolite heat is released to the air and subsequently to the building space This form of TES with specific use of zeolites was first taught by John Guerra in 1978 32 Carbon capture and storage editTypical adsorbents proposed for carbon capture and storage are zeolites and MOFs 33 The customization of adsorbents makes them a potentially attractive alternative to absorption Because adsorbents can be regenerated by temperature or pressure swing this step can be less energy intensive than absorption regeneration methods 34 Major problems that are present with adsorption cost in carbon capture are regenerating the adsorbent mass ratio solvent MOF cost of adsorbent production of the adsorbent lifetime of adsorbent 35 In sorption enhanced water gas shift SEWGS technology a pre combustion carbon capture process based on solid adsorption is combined with the water gas shift reaction WGS in order to produce a high pressure hydrogen stream 36 The CO2 stream produced can be stored or used for other industrial processes 37 Protein and surfactant adsorption editMain article Protein adsorption Protein adsorption is a process that has a fundamental role in the field of biomaterials Indeed biomaterial surfaces in contact with biological media such as blood or serum are immediately coated by proteins Therefore living cells do not interact directly with the biomaterial surface but with the adsorbed proteins layer This protein layer mediates the interaction between biomaterials and cells translating biomaterial physical and chemical properties into a biological language 38 In fact cell membrane receptors bind to protein layer bioactive sites and these receptor protein binding events are transduced through the cell membrane in a manner that stimulates specific intracellular processes that then determine cell adhesion shape growth and differentiation Protein adsorption is influenced by many surface properties such as surface wettability surface chemical composition 39 and surface nanometre scale morphology 40 Surfactant adsorption is a similar phenomenon but utilising surfactant molecules in the place of proteins 41 Adsorption chillers edit nbsp A schematic diagram of an adsorption chiller 1 heat is lost through evaporation of refrigerant 2 refrigerant vapour is adsorbed onto the solid medium 3 refrigerant is desorbed from the solid medium section not in use 4 refrigerant is condensed and returned to the start 5 amp 6 solid medium is cycled between adsorption and desorption to regenerate it Combining an adsorbent with a refrigerant adsorption chillers use heat to provide a cooling effect This heat in the form of hot water may come from any number of industrial sources including waste heat from industrial processes prime heat from solar thermal installations or from the exhaust or water jacket heat of a piston engine or turbine Although there are similarities between adsorption chillers and absorption refrigeration the former is based on the interaction between gases and solids The adsorption chamber of the chiller is filled with a solid material for example zeolite silica gel alumina active carbon or certain types of metal salts which in its neutral state has adsorbed the refrigerant When heated the solid desorbs releases refrigerant vapour which subsequently is cooled and liquefied This liquid refrigerant then provides a cooling effect at the evaporator from its enthalpy of vaporization In the final stage the refrigerant vapour is re adsorbed into the solid 42 As an adsorption chiller requires no compressor it is relatively quiet Portal site mediated adsorption editPortal site mediated adsorption is a model for site selective activated gas adsorption in metallic catalytic systems that contain a variety of different adsorption sites In such systems low coordination edge and corner defect like sites can exhibit significantly lower adsorption enthalpies than high coordination basal plane sites As a result these sites can serve as portals for very rapid adsorption to the rest of the surface The phenomenon relies on the common spillover effect described below where certain adsorbed species exhibit high mobility on some surfaces The model explains seemingly inconsistent observations of gas adsorption thermodynamics and kinetics in catalytic systems where surfaces can exist in a range of coordination structures and it has been successfully applied to bimetallic catalytic systems where synergistic activity is observed In contrast to pure spillover portal site adsorption refers to surface diffusion to adjacent adsorption sites not to non adsorptive support surfaces The model appears to have been first proposed for carbon monoxide on silica supported platinum by Brandt et al 1993 43 A similar but independent model was developed by King and co workers 44 45 46 to describe hydrogen adsorption on silica supported alkali promoted ruthenium silver ruthenium and copper ruthenium bimetallic catalysts The same group applied the model to CO hydrogenation Fischer Tropsch synthesis 47 Zupanc et al 2002 subsequently confirmed the same model for hydrogen adsorption on magnesia supported caesium ruthenium bimetallic catalysts 48 Trens et al 2009 have similarly described CO surface diffusion on carbon supported Pt particles of varying morphology 49 Adsorption spillover editIn the case catalytic or adsorbent systems where a metal species is dispersed upon a support or carrier material often quasi inert oxides such as alumina or silica it is possible for an adsorptive species to indirectly adsorb to the support surface under conditions where such adsorption is thermodynamically unfavorable The presence of the metal serves as a lower energy pathway for gaseous species to first adsorb to the metal and then diffuse on the support surface This is possible because the adsorbed species attains a lower energy state once it has adsorbed to the metal thus lowering the activation barrier between the gas phase species and the support adsorbed species Hydrogen spillover is the most common example of an adsorptive spillover In the case of hydrogen adsorption is most often accompanied with dissociation of molecular hydrogen H2 to atomic hydrogen H followed by spillover of the hydrogen atoms present The spillover effect has been used to explain many observations in heterogeneous catalysis and adsorption 50 Polymer adsorption editMain article polymer adsorption Adsorption of molecules onto polymer surfaces is central to a number of applications including development of non stick coatings and in various biomedical devices Polymers may also be adsorbed to surfaces through polyelectrolyte adsorption In viruses editAdsorption is the first step in the viral life cycle The next steps are penetration uncoating synthesis transcription if needed and translation and release The virus replication cycle in this respect is similar for all types of viruses Factors such as transcription may or may not be needed if the virus is able to integrate its genomic information in the cell s nucleus or if the virus can replicate itself directly within the cell s cytoplasm In popular culture editThe game of Tetris is a puzzle game in which blocks of 4 are adsorbed onto a surface during game play Scientists have used Tetris blocks as a proxy for molecules with a complex shape and their adsorption on a flat surface for studying the thermodynamics of nanoparticles 51 52 See also editAdatom Cryo adsorption Dual polarization interferometry Fluidized bed concentrator Kelvin probe force microscope Micromeritics Molecular sieve Polanyi adsorption Pressure swing adsorption Random sequential adsorption Hydrogen bonded organic frameworkReferences edit Guruge Amila Ruwan 2021 02 17 Absorption Vs Adsorption Chemical and Process Engineering Retrieved 2023 11 26 Glossary The Brownfields and Land Revitalization Technology Support Center Archived from the original on 2008 02 18 Retrieved 2009 12 21 absorption chemistry Memidex WordNet Dictionary Thesaurus Archived from the original on 2018 10 05 Retrieved 2010 11 02 Atkins P W De Paula Julio Keeler James 2018 Atkins Physical chemistry Eleventh ed Oxford United Kingdom ISBN 978 0 19 876986 6 OCLC 1020028162 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link page needed Ferrari L Kaufmann J Winnefeld F Plank J 2010 Interaction of cement model systems with superplasticizers investigated by atomic force microscopy zeta potential and adsorption measurements J Colloid Interface Sci 347 1 15 24 Bibcode 2010JCIS 347 15F doi 10 1016 j jcis 2010 03 005 PMID 20356605 Khosrowshahi Mobin Safarzadeh Abdol Mohammad Ali Mashhadimoslem Hossein Khakpour Elnaz Emrooz Hosein Banna Motejadded Sadeghzadeh Sadegh Ghaemi Ahad 26 May 2022 The role of surface chemistry on CO2 adsorption in biomass derived porous carbons by experimental results and molecular dynamics simulations Scientific Reports 12 1 8917 Bibcode 2022NatSR 12 8917K doi 10 1038 s41598 022 12596 5 PMC 9135713 PMID 35618757 S2CID 249096513 Carroll Gregory T Jongejan Mahthild G M Pijper Dirk Feringa Ben L 2010 Spontaneous generation and patterning of chiral polymeric surface toroids Chemical Science 1 4 469 doi 10 1039 c0sc00159g ISSN 2041 6520 S2CID 96957407 Czelej K Cwieka K Kurzydlowski K J May 2016 CO2 stability on the Ni low index surfaces Van der Waals corrected DFT analysis Catalysis Communications 80 5 33 38 doi 10 1016 j catcom 2016 03 017 Czelej K Cwieka K Colmenares J C Kurzydlowski K J 2016 Insight on the Interaction of Methanol Selective Oxidation Intermediates with Au or and Pd Containing Monometallic and Bimetallic Core Shell Catalysts Langmuir 32 30 7493 7502 doi 10 1021 acs langmuir 6b01906 PMID 27373791 Kayser Heinrich 1881 Uber die Verdichtung von Gasen an Oberflachen in ihrer Abhangigkeit von Druck und Temperatur Annalen der Physik und Chemie 248 4 526 537 Bibcode 1881AnP 248 526K doi 10 1002 andp 18812480404 In this study of the adsorption of gases by charcoal the first use of the word adsorption appears on page 527 Schon Saussure kannte die beiden fur die Grosse der Adsorption massgebenden Factoren den Druck und die Temperatur da er Erniedrigung des Druckes oder Erhohung der Temperatur zur Befreiung der porosen Korper von Gasen benutzte Saussaure already knew the two factors that determine the quantity of adsorption namely the pressure and temperature since he used the lowering of the pressure or the raising of the temperature to free the porous substances of gases Foo K Y Hameed B H 2010 Insights into the modeling of adsorption isotherm systems Chemical Engineering Journal 156 1 2 10 doi 10 1016 j cej 2009 09 013 ISSN 1385 8947 S2CID 11760738 Czepirski L Balys M R Komorowska Czepirska E 2000 Some generalization of Langmuir adsorption isotherm Internet Journal of Chemistry 3 14 ISSN 1099 8292 Archived from the original on 2017 01 13 Retrieved 2013 11 19 a b Burke GM Wurster DE Buraphacheep V Berg MJ Veng Pedersen P Schottelius DD Model selection for the adsorption of phenobarbital by activated charcoal Pharm Res 1991 8 2 228 231 doi 10 1023 a 1015800322286 Physical Chemistry of Surfaces Arthur W Adamson Interscience Wiley New York 6th ed Kisliuk P January 1957 The sticking probabilities of gases chemisorbed on the surfaces of solids Journal of Physics and Chemistry of Solids 3 1 2 95 101 Bibcode 1957JPCS 3 95K doi 10 1016 0022 3697 57 90054 9 Langmuir I Schaefer V J 1937 The Effect of Dissolved Salts on Insoluble Monolayers Journal of the American Chemical Society 29 11 2400 2414 doi 10 1021 ja01290a091 a b Chen Jixin 2020 Stochastic Adsorption of Diluted Solute Molecules at Interfaces ChemRxiv doi 10 26434 chemrxiv 12402404 S2CID 242860958 Ward A F H Tordai L 1946 Time dependence of Boundary Tensions of Solutions I The Role of Diffusion in Time effects Journal of Chemical Physics 14 7 453 461 Bibcode 1946JChPh 14 453W doi 10 1063 1 1724167 Condon James 2020 Surface Area and Porosity Determinations by Physisorption Measurement Classical Theory and Quantum Theory 2nd edition Amsterdam NL Elsevier pp Chapters 3 4 and 5 ISBN 978 0 12 818785 2 Polanyi M 1914 Uber die Adsorption vom Standpunkt des dritten Warmesatzes Verhandlungen der Deutschen Physikalischen Gesellschaft in German 16 1012 Polanyi M 1920 Neueres uber Adsorption und Ursache der Adsorptionskrafte Zeitschrift fur Elektrochemie 26 370 374 Polanyi M 1929 Grundlagen der Potentialtheorie der Adsorption Zeitschrift fur Elektrochemie in German 35 431 432 deBoer J H Zwikker C 1929 Adsorption als Folge von Polarisation Zeitschrift fur Physikalische Chemie in German B3 407 420 Yi Honghong April 2015 Effect of the Adsorbent Pore Structure on the Separation of Carbon Dioxide and Methane Gas Mixtures Journal of Chemical amp Engineering Data 60 5 1388 1395 doi 10 1021 je501109q Retrieved 21 April 2023 Viswambari Devi R Nair Vijay V Sathyamoorthy P Doble Mukesh 2022 Mixture of CaCO3 Polymorphs Serves as Best Adsorbent of Heavy Metals in Quadruple System Journal of Hazardous Toxic amp Radioactive Waste 26 1 doi 10 1061 ASCE HZ 2153 5515 0000651 S2CID 240454883 Spessato L et al KOH super activated carbon from biomass waste Insights into the paracetamol adsorption mechanism and thermal regeneration cycles Journal of Hazardous Materials Vol 371 Pages 499 505 2019 Spessato L et al Optimization of Sibipiruna activated carbon preparation by simplex centroid mixture design for simultaneous adsorption of rhodamine B and metformin Journal of Hazardous Materials Vol 411 Page 125166 2021 Malhotra Milan Suresh Sumathi Garg Anurag 2018 Tea waste derived activated carbon for the adsorption of sodium diclofenac from wastewater adsorbent characteristics adsorption isotherms kinetics and thermodynamics Environmental Science and Pollution Research 25 32 32210 32220 Bibcode 2018ESPR 2532210M doi 10 1007 s11356 018 3148 y PMID 30221322 S2CID 52280860 Blankenship L Scott Mokaya Robert 2022 02 21 Modulating the porosity of carbons for improved adsorption of hydrogen carbon dioxide and methane a review Materials Advances 3 4 1905 1930 doi 10 1039 D1MA00911G ISSN 2633 5409 S2CID 245927099 Mohan S Nair Vijay V 2020 Comparative study of separation of heavy metals from leachate using activated carbon and fuel ash Journal of Hazardous Toxic amp Radioactive Waste 24 4 473 491 doi 10 1061 ASCE HZ 2153 5515 0000520 PMID 04020031 S2CID 219747988 Assadi M Hussein N Hanaor Dorian A H June 2016 The effects of copper doping on photocatalytic activity at 101 planes of anatase TiO2 A theoretical study Applied Surface Science 387 387 682 689 arXiv 1811 09157 Bibcode 2016ApSS 387 682A doi 10 1016 j apsusc 2016 06 178 S2CID 99834042 U S Pat No 4 269 170 Adsorption solar heating and storage Inventor John M Guerra Granted May 26 1981 Berend Smit Reimer Jeffery A Oldenburg Curtis M Bourg Ian C 2014 Introduction to carbon capture and sequestration Imperial College Press ISBN 9781306496834 D Alessandro Deanna M Smit Berend Long Jeffrey R 16 August 2010 Carbon Dioxide Capture Prospects for New Materials Angewandte Chemie International Edition 49 35 6058 6082 doi 10 1002 anie 201000431 PMID 20652916 Sathre Roger Masanet Eric 2013 03 18 Prospective life cycle modeling of a carbon capture and storage system using metal organic frameworks for CO2 capture RSC Advances 3 15 4964 Bibcode 2013RSCAd 3 4964S doi 10 1039 C3RA40265G ISSN 2046 2069 Jansen Daniel van Selow Edward Cobden Paul Manzolini Giampaolo Macchi Ennio Gazzani Matteo Blom Richard Henriksen Partow Pakdel Beavis Rich Wright Andrew 2013 SEWGS Technology is Now Ready for Scale up Energy Procedia 37 2265 2273 doi 10 1016 j egypro 2013 06 107 Eric van Dijk H A J Cobden Paul D Lukashuk Liliana de Water Leon van Lundqvist Magnus Manzolini Giampaolo Cormos Calin Cristian van Dijk Camiel Mancuso Luca Johns Jeremy Bellqvist David 1 October 2018 STEPWISE Project Sorption Enhanced Water Gas Shift Technology to Reduce Carbon Footprint in the Iron and Steel Industry Johnson Matthey Technology Review 62 4 395 402 doi 10 1595 205651318X15268923666410 hdl 11311 1079169 S2CID 139928989 Wilson CJ Clegg RE Leavesley DI Pearcy MJ 2005 Mediation of Biomaterial Cell Interactions by Adsorbed Proteins A Review Tissue Engineering 11 1 1 18 doi 10 1089 ten 2005 11 1 PMID 15738657 S2CID 19306269 Sivaraman B Fears K P Latour R A 2009 Investigation of the effects of surface chemistry and solution concentration on the conformation of adsorbed proteins using an improved circular dichroism method Langmuir 25 5 3050 6 doi 10 1021 la8036814 PMC 2891683 PMID 19437712 Scopelliti Pasquale Emanuele Borgonovo Antonio Indrieri Marco Giorgetti Luca Bongiorno Gero Carbone Roberta Podesta Alessandro Milani Paolo 2010 Zhang Shuguang ed The effect of surface nanometre scale morphology on protein adsorption PLoS ONE 5 7 e11862 Bibcode 2010PLoSO 511862S doi 10 1371 journal pone 0011862 PMC 2912332 PMID 20686681 Cheraghian Goshtasp 2017 Evaluation of Clay and Fumed Silica Nanoparticles on Adsorption of Surfactant Polymer during Enhanced Oil Recovery Journal of the Japan Petroleum Institute 60 2 85 94 doi 10 1627 jpi 60 85 Pilatowsky I Romero R J Isaza C A Gamboa S A Sebastian P J Rivera W 2011 Sorption Refrigeration Systems Cogeneration Fuel Cell Sorption Air Conditioning Systems Green Energy and Technology Springer pp 99 100 doi 10 1007 978 1 84996 028 1 5 ISBN 978 1 84996 027 4 Brandt Robert K Hughes M R Bourget L P Truszkowska K Greenler Robert G April 1993 The interpretation of CO adsorbed on Pt SiO2 of two different particle size distributions Surface Science 286 1 2 15 25 Bibcode 1993SurSc 286 15B doi 10 1016 0039 6028 93 90552 U Uner D O Savargoankar N Pruski M King T S 1997 The effects of alkali promoters on the dynamics of hydrogen chemisorption and syngas reaction kinetics on Ru SiO2 surfaces Dynamics of Surfaces and Reaction Kinetics in Heterogeneous Catalysis Proceedings of the International Symposium Studies in Surface Science and Catalysis Vol 109 pp 315 324 doi 10 1016 s0167 2991 97 80418 1 ISBN 9780444826091 Narayan R L King T S March 1998 Hydrogen adsorption states on silica supported Ru Ag and Ru Cu bimetallic catalysts investigated via microcalorimetry Thermochimica Acta 312 1 2 105 114 doi 10 1016 S0040 6031 97 00444 9 VanderWiel David P Pruski Marek King Terry S November 1999 A Kinetic Study on the Adsorption and Reaction of Hydrogen over Silica Supported Ruthenium and Silver Ruthenium Catalysts during the Hydrogenation of Carbon Monoxide Journal of Catalysis 188 1 186 202 doi 10 1006 jcat 1999 2646 Uner D O 1 June 1998 A Sensible Mechanism of Alkali Promotion in Fischer Tropsch Synthesis Adsorbate Mobilities Industrial amp Engineering Chemistry Research 37 6 2239 2245 doi 10 1021 ie970696d Zupanc C Hornung A Hinrichsen O Muhler M July 2002 The Interaction of Hydrogen with Ru MgO Catalysts Journal of Catalysis 209 2 501 514 doi 10 1006 jcat 2002 3647 Trens Philippe Durand Robert Coq Bernard Coutanceau Christophe Rousseau Severine Lamy Claude November 2009 Poisoning of Pt C catalysts by CO and its consequences over the kinetics of hydrogen chemisorption Applied Catalysis B Environmental 92 3 4 280 284 Bibcode 2009AppCB 92 280T doi 10 1016 j apcatb 2009 08 004 Rozanov Valerii V Krylov Oleg V 28 February 1997 Hydrogen spillover in heterogeneous catalysis Russian Chemical Reviews 66 2 107 119 Bibcode 1997RuCRv 66 107R doi 10 1070 rc1997v066n02abeh000308 S2CID 250890123 Ford Matt 6 May 2009 The thermodynamics of Tetris Ars Technica Barnes Brian C Siderius Daniel W Gelb Lev D 2009 Structure Thermodynamics and Solubility in Tetromino Fluids Langmuir 25 12 6702 16 doi 10 1021 la900196b PMID 19397254 Further reading editCussler E L 1997 Diffusion Mass Transfer in Fluid Systems 2nd ed New York Cambridge University Press pp 308 330 ISBN 978 0 521 45078 2 External links edit nbsp Look up adsorption in Wiktionary the free dictionary Derivation of Langmuir and BET isotherms at JHU edu Carbon Adsorption at MEGTEC com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Adsorption amp oldid 1192276040, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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