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Impact of Geometrical Disorder on Phase Equilibria of Fluids and Solids Confined in Mesoporous Materials
Author(s) -
Henry R. N. B. Enninful,
Daniel Schneider,
Dirk Enke,
Rustem Valiullin
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
langmuir
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.042
H-Index - 333
eISSN - 1520-5827
pISSN - 0743-7463
DOI - 10.1021/acs.langmuir.0c03047
Subject(s) - mesoporous material , nanoporous , porous medium , characterization (materials science) , porosity , materials science , phase transition , phase (matter) , state of matter , sorption , thermodynamics , adsorption , nanotechnology , chemistry , physics , condensed matter physics , organic chemistry , catalysis , composite material
Porous solids used in practical applications often possess structural disorder over broad length scales. This disorder strongly affects different properties of the substances confined in their pore spaces. Quantifying structural disorder and correlating it with the physical properties of confined matter is thus a necessary step toward the rational use of porous solids in practical applications and process optimization. The present work focuses on recent advances made in the understanding of correlations between the phase state and geometric disorder in nanoporous solids. We overview the recently developed statistical theory for phase transitions in a minimalistic model of disordered pore networks: linear chains of pores with statistical disorder. By correlating its predictions with various experimental observations, we show that this model gives notable insight into collective phenomena in phase-transition processes in disordered materials and is capable of explaining self-consistently the majority of the experimental results obtained for gas-liquid and solid-liquid equilibria in mesoporous solids. The potentials of the theory for improving the gas sorption and thermoporometry characterization of porous materials are discussed.

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