Surface diffusion in liquid-filled pores
β Scribed by Hiroshi Komiyama; J. M. Smith
- Publisher
- American Institute of Chemical Engineers
- Year
- 1974
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 815 KB
- Volume
- 20
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0001-1541
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Surface diffusivities of benzaldehyde in liquidβfilled pores of Amberlite particles (polystyrene) were measured at 25Β°C using water as a solvent. For particles of different surface areas but chemically similar pore surfaces, the intrinsic surface diffusivity D~s~' was about the same, but the relative importance of surface to poreβvolume diffusion increased with surface area. For a single type of particle, the adsorption capacity was decreased about twentyβfold by adding up to 19 mole % methanol to the solvent. This was accompanied by an increase in D~s~' from 1.2 Γ 10^β8^ to 1.2 Γ 10^β7^ cm^2^/s. These results were interpreted in terms of a twoβstep theory for surface migration: (1) formation of a vacant site on the adsorbent surface followed by (2) movement of the adsorbate molecule into the site by breaking the surfaceβadsorbate bond. The theory predicts that surface transport will be large when the surface area is high and that the D~s~' will be large when the heat of adsorption is low, and when the bond between solvent molecules and the surface is weak.
In our studies the surface contribution to intraparticle transport was as much as 20 times the contribution due to poreβvolume diffusion. This ratio increases as the concentration of adsorbate in the liquid decreases.
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