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Characterization of Pore Structure: Foundation

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Title: Characterization of Pore Structure: Foundation


1
Characterization of Pore Structure Foundation
  • Dr. Akshaya Jena
  • Director of Research
  • Porous Materials, Inc., USA

2
Topics
  • Pore structure
  • Characteristics of pore structure
  • Characterization techniques
  • Extrusion Flow Porometry
  • Liquid Extrusion Porosimetry
  • Mercury Intrusion Porosimetry

3
Topics
  • Nonmercury Intrusion Porosimetry
  • Vapor Adsorption
  • Vapor Condensation
  • Conclusions

4
Pore Structure
5
Pore Structure
6
Characteristics of Pore Structure
7
Characteristics of Pore Structure
8
Characteristics of Pore Structure
9
Characterization Techniques
10
Extrusion Flow Porometry (Capillary Flow
Porometry)
Principle Displacement of a wetting liquid from
a pore
  • Wetting liquid
  • Flows spontaneously into pores

11
Extrusion Flow Porometry (Capillary Flow
Porometry)
Principle Displacement of a wetting liquid from
a pore
  • For displacement of wetting (gs/lltgs/g) liquid
    from a pore by a gas
  • Work done by gas Increase in interfacial free
    energy

12
Extrusion Flow Porometry (Capillary Flow
Porometry)
  • For all small displacement of liquid

13
Extrusion Flow Porometry (Capillary Flow
Porometry)
p d V gs/g dSs/g gs/l dSs/l gl/g dSl/g p
differential pressure dV infinitesimal increase
in volume of the gas in the pore dSs/g
infinitesimal increase in interfacial area
  • For a wetting liquid
  • p gl/g cos q (dSs/g/dV)
  • (dSs/g/dV) measure of pore size

14
Extrusion Flow Porometry (Capillary Flow
Porometry)
  • For most pores size not defined

15
Extrusion Flow Porometry (Capillary Flow
Porometry)
Definition of pore diameter, D dS/dV(pore)
  • dS/dV(cylindrical opening of diameter, D)
  • 4/D
  • D 4gl/g cos q/p

16
Extrusion Flow Porometry (Capillary Flow
Porometry)
  • Test Method
  • Dry Curve
  • Flow rate, F versus p for a dry sample

17
Extrusion Flow Porometry (Capillary Flow
Porometry)
Test Method
  • For viscous flow
  • F ??/(256m l ps)?iNiDi4pi pop
  • ? a constant
  • m viscosity of gas
  • l thickness
  • ps standard pressure
  • Ni number of pores of diameter Di
  • p differential pressure, inlet pressure, pi
    minus outlet pressure, po

18
Extrusion Flow Porometry (Capillary Flow
Porometry)
  • Dry curve normally concave upward

19
Extrusion Flow Porometry (Capillary Flow
Porometry)
  • Others possible shape of dry curve because of
  • High pressure
  • Nonviscous flow
  • Tortuous paths for flow
  • High flow rate
  • Pore diameter
  • Interaction of sample with liquid

20
Extrusion Flow Porometry (Capillary Flow
Porometry)
  • Wet Curve
  • F versus p for a wet sample
  • Initially there is no gas flow
  • The largest pore is emptied first and gas flow
    begins
  • With increase in differential pressure smaller
    pores are emptied and gas flow increases
  • When all pores are empty wet curve converges with
    the dry curve with the dry curve

21
Extrusion Flow Porometry (Capillary Flow
Porometry)
  • Equipment

22
Extrusion Flow Porometry (Capillary Flow
Porometry)
  • Measurable Characteristics
  • Through pore Throat Diameter
  • The technique measured only the throat diameter

23
Extrusion Flow Porometry (Capillary Flow
Porometry)
  • The largest pore diameter (Bubble Point Pore
    Diameter)
  • Bubble point pressure in F vs p plot.

24
Extrusion Flow Porometry (Capillary Flow
Porometry)
25
Extrusion Flow Porometry (Capillary Flow
Porometry)
  • Mean flow pore diameter

26
Extrusion Flow Porometry (Capillary Flow
Porometry)
  • Pore diameter range
  • Largest - Bubble point pressure
  • Lowest - pressure at which wet and dry
    curves meet

27
Extrusion Flow Porometry (Capillary Flow
Porometry)
  • Distribution
  • F ??/ (256? l ps) ?iNiDi4pipop
  • (F w,j / Fd,j) g(D,N, )w,j/g(D,N,)d,j
  • Cumulative filter flow
  • (F w,j / Fd,j)x100

28
Extrusion Flow Porometry (Capillary Flow
Porometry)
29
Extrusion Flow Porometry (Capillary Flow
Porometry)
Flow distribution over pore diameter
  • fF - dFw/Fd)x100/dD
  • ?(Fw/Fd)x100 D1?D2-fFdD
  • Area in a pore size range flow in that size
    range

30
Extrusion Flow Porometry (Capillary Flow
Porometry)
Fractional pore number distribution
  • Fractional pore number Ni/??iNi

31
Extrusion Flow Porometry (Capillary Flow
Porometry)
  • Liquid permeability
  • Computed from flow rate at average pressure using
    Darcys law
  • F k (A/ml)(pi-po)

32
Extrusion Flow Porometry (Capillary Flow
Porometry)
  • Gas permeability
  • Computed from flow rate at STP
  • F k (A/2mlps)(pipo)pi-po
  • Can be expressed in any unit Darcy Gurley Fraz
    ier Rayls

33
Extrusion Flow Porometry (Capillary Flow
Porometry)
  • Envelope Surface Area
  • Based on Kozeny-Carman relation
  • F l/p A P3/K(1-P)2S2m ZP2p/(1-P) S
    (2ppr)1/2
  • F gas flow rate in volume at average pressure,
    p per unit time
  • p average pressure, (pipo)/2, where pi is
    the inlet pressure and po is the outlet
    pressure

34
Extrusion Flow Porometry (Capillary Flow
Porometry)
Envelope Surface Area
F gas flow rate in volume at average pressure,
p per unit time
  • p average pressure, (pipo)/2, where pi is
    the inlet pressure and po is the outlet
    pressure
  • l thickness of sample
  • p pressure drop, (pi - po)
  • A cross-sectional area of sample
  • P porosity (pore volume / total volume)
  • 1-(rb/ra)

35
Extrusion Flow Porometry (Capillary Flow
Porometry)
Envelope Surface Area
rb bulk density of sample ra true density
of sample
  • S through pore surface area per unit volume
    of solid in the sample
  • m viscosity of gas
  • r density of the gas at the average pressure,
    p
  • K a constant dependent on the geometry of the
    pores in the porous media. It has a value close
    to 5 for random pored media
  • Z a constant. It is shown to be (48/13p).

36
Extrusion Flow Porometry (Capillary Flow
Porometry)
  • Summary
  • Flow Porometry measures a large variety of
    important pore structure characteristics.
  • Results particularly relevant for filtration
    media
  • Toxic materials, high pressures subzero
    temperatures not used
  • A highly versatile technique

37
Extrusion Porosimetry
  • Principle
  • Prevention of gas from flowing out after
    displacing wetting liquid in pore
  • Place membrane under the sample
  • Largest pore of membrane ltSmallest pore of
    interest in sample p(to empty sample pores)ltp(to
    empty membrane pores)
  • D 4 gl/g cos q/p

38
Extrusion Porosimetry
  • Displaced liquid flows through membrane measured

39
Extrusion Porosimetry
  • Gas that displaces liquid in sample pores does
    not pass through membrane

40
Extrusion Porosimetry
  • Test method
  • Differential pressure yields pore diameter
  • Extruded liquid (weight or volume) gives pore
    volume

41
Extrusion Porosimetry
  • Equipment

42
Extrusion Porosimetry
  • Measurable Characteristics
  • Through pore volume

43
Extrusion Porosimetry
  • Through pore diameter

44
Extrusion Porosimetry
  • Through pore volume distribution
  • Distribution function
  • fv -(dV/d logD)
  • Area in any pore size range volume of pores in
    that range

45
Extrusion Porosimetry
  • Through pore surface area
  • Integration of Equationp gl/g cos q (dSs/g/dV)
  • S ?p dV/(gl/g cos q)
  • Not very accurate
  • Sensitive to pore configuration
  • Over estimates volume of pore throat

46
Extrusion Porosimetry
  • Liquid permeability
  • From liquid flow rate

47
Extrusion Porosimetry
  • Summary
  • Only technique that permits measurement of
    through pore volume
  • Does not use toxic materials, high pressures and
    subzero temperatures.

48
Mercury Intrusion Porosimetry
  • Principle
  • Intrusion of a non-wetting liquid in to pore
  • Non-wetting liquid cannot enter pores
    spontaneously
  • gs/l gtgs/g

49
Mercury Intrusion Porosimetry
  • Pressurized liquid can enter pores
  • Work done by the liquid Increase in interfacial
    free energy
  • (p-pg) dV (gs/l -gs/g) ds ?P (-gl/g cos
    q) (dS/dV)

50
Mercury Intrusion Porosimetry
  • From definition of pore diameter(dS/dV) pore
    (dS/dV) circular opening of diameter, D 4/Dp
    -4gl/g cos q/D

51
Mercury Intrusion Porosimetry
  • Test Method
  • Measured intrusion pressure yields pore diameter
  • Measured intrusion volume of mercury yields pore
    volume

52
Mercury Intrusion Porosimetry
  • Equipment

53
Mercury Intrusion Porosimeter
  • Measurable Characteristics
  • Through and blind pore volume

54
Mercury Intrusion Porosimetry
  • Through and blind pore diameter

55
Mercury Intrusion Porosimetry
  • Through and blind pore diameter

56
Mercury Intrusion Porosimetry
  • Through and blind pore diameter

57
Mercury Intrusion Porosimetry
  • Pore Volume distribution
  • fv -(dV/d log D)
  • Area in a size range Pore volume in that range

58
Mercury Intrusion Porosimetry
  • Through and blind pore surface are
  • S 1/(-gl/g cos q) ?p dV

59
Mercury Intrusion Porosimetry
  • Surface area not very accurate
  • Wide parts of ink-bottle pores measured as pores
    with neck diameter

60
Mercury Intrusion Porosimetry
Surface area not very accurate
  • For very small pores, large pressure increases
    cause small increases in volume. The integral is
    less accurate.
  • At high pressures, correction terms in the small
    volume of small pores is appreciable

61
Mercury Intrusion Porosiemtry
Extrusion volume and hysteresis
62
Mercury Intrusion Porosimetry
63
Mercury Intrusion Porosimetry
  • Summary
  • Almost any material can be tested - mercury in
    non-wetting to most materials
  • No flow characteristics are measurable
  • Uses toxic materials and high pressures

64
Non-Mercury Intrusion Porosimetry
  • Principle
  • Exactly same as mercury intrusion porosimetry
  • Non-wetting intrusion liquid is NOT MERCURY
  • Water
  • Oil
  • Application liquid

65
Non-Mercury Intrusion Porosimetry
  • Measurable Characteristics
  • All characteristics measurable by mercury
    intrusion porosimetry - measurable

66
Non-Mercury Intrusion Porosimetry
Measurable Characteristics
  • Advantages over Mercury Intrusion Porosimetry
  • No toxic material used
  • An order of magnitude low pressures used
  • Smaller pores measurable
  • Can measure one kind of pores in a mixture like
    the mixture of hydrophobic and hydrophilic pores

67
Non-Mercury Intrusion Porosimetry
  • Summary
  • Can measure all characteristics measurable by
    Mercury Intrusion without using any toxic
    material or high pressures
  • Can detect one kind of pore in a mixture

68
Vapor Adsorption
  • Principle
  • Physical Adsorption
  • Weak van der Waals type interaction with surface
  • Multi-layer adsorption

69
Vapor Adsorption
  • BET theory of physical adsorption
  • p/(po-p)W 1/(WmC) (c-1)/WmC(p/po)
  • W amount of adsorbed gas
  • Wm amount of gas that can form a monomolecular
    layer
  • C a dimensionless constant
  • (A1v2/A2v1) exp (E-L)/RT

70
Vapor Adsorption
  • p/po-p)Wversus(p/po)-linear
  • Wm 1/(intercept)(slope)
  • Surface area
  • S WmNoa
  • No Avogadros number
  • a cross-sectional area of the adsorbed gas
    molecule

71
Vapor Adsorption
  • Chemisorption
  • Chemical interaction between the gas and the
    surface
  • Only one layer of molecules gets bonded to the
    material

72
Vapor Adsorption
  • Model for chemisorption (Langmuir)
  • p/W 1(KWm)p1/Wm
  • p pressure of gas
  • W amount of adsorbed gas
  • K Ko exp(E/RT)
  • Wm amount of adsorbed gas for a completed
    monomolecular layer

73
Vapor Adsorption
  • Test Method
  • Sample maintained at constant temperature
  • Volumetric method
  • A known amount of gas is introduced in to the
    sample chamber of known volume
  • Amount of gas left in the sample chamber is
    computed from change in gas pressure

74
Vapor Adsorption
Test Method
  • Gravimetric method
  • Weight gain of sample in the sample chamber is
    measured

75
Vapor Adsorption
  • Equipment

76
Vapor Adsorption
  • Measurable Characteristics
  • Through and blind pore surface area
  • Multipoint surface area
  • p/(po-p)Wversus(p/po)linear in the range 0.05lt
    (p/po)lt0.35
  • Plot of p/(po-p)Wversus (p/po)

77
Vapor Adsorption
78
Vapor Adsorption
  • Single point surface area
  • Assuming large C, Wm, is computed from a single
    measurement
  • Good approximation for large C

79
Vapor Adsorption
  • Chemisorption
  • Chemisorption of many chemicals measurable
  • Water
  • Carbon monoxide
  • Carbon dioxide
  • Poisonous chemicals
  • Many others
  • Over a wide range of temperature and pressure

80
Vapor Adsorption
81
Vapor Adsorption
  • Summary
  • Technique determines surface area accurately
  • Both through pore and blind pore surface areas
    are measured.

82
Vapor Condensation
  • Principle
  • Condensation of vapor in pore

83
Vapor Condensation
? Gv(p)?l (pore) dV(?Gv(p)?l(bulk)/V)dS?G
ss/v?s/l 0
  • dV volume of condensed liquid
  • V molar volume of liquid
  • dS solid/liquid interfacial area

84
Vapor Condensation
dV(?Gv(p)?l(bulk) ?Gv(p)?v(po) RT ln
(po/p)
  • ?Gss/v?s/l (gs/l - gs/v)
  • ln(p/po) -4Vgl/v cos q/RT/D

85
Vapor Condensation
  • Definition of pore diameter (dS/dV) Pore
  • (dS/dV)Cyliderical opening of diameter,
    D 4/D
  • ln(p/po) -4Vgl/v cos q/RT/D

86
Vapor Condensation
  • Test method
  • Measures relative vapor pressure (p/po)
  • Measures amount of condensed vapor At a given
    pressure

87
Vapor Condensation
  • Equipment

88
Vapor Condensation
  • Measurable Characteristics
  • Through and blind pore volume
  • Condensation occurs in through blind pores

89
Vapor Condensation
  • Through and blind diameter
  • Diameter of pore from condensation
  • ln(p/po) -4V gl/v cos q/RTD
  • Prior to condensation, pores contain adsorbed
    films
  • True pore radius, rp
  • rp (D/2)t
  • t thickness of adsorbed layer

90
Vapor Condensation
91
Vapor Condensation
  • Pore Volume Distribution
  • Distribution function fvfv -(dV/dD)
  • Area in any pore diameter range volume of pores
    in that range

92
Vapor Condensation
  • Pore structure of materials containing very small
    pores
  • Type of pores
  • Macropores gt0.05mm
  • Mesopores 0.002-0.05mm
  • Micropores lt0.002mm

93
Vapor Condensation
Pore structure of materials containing very small
pores
  • Capability
  • Technique 0.2-0.00035mm
  • Validity of relations ? 0.0015mm
  • For micropores data need to be analyzed using
    other models

94
Vapor Condensation
  • Adsorption and desorption isotherms and hystersis

95
Vapor Condensation
96
Vapor Condensation
  • Shape of adsorption curve ? many factors
  • Large number of larger pores ? High adsorption at
    high pressure
  • Large number of small pores ? saturation
  • Strong interaction of adsorbate with the adsorbed
    ? increasing adsorption

97
Vapor Condensation
98
Vapor Condensation
  • Summary
  • Measure volume and diameter of very small through
    and blind pores
  • No other technique can measure such
    characteristics

99
Conclusions
  • Extrusion Techniques
  • Two recent techniques Extrusion Flow Porometry
    Liquid Extrusion Porosimetry have been
    discussed in detail

100
Conclusions
  • The techniques are capable of measuring a wide
    variety of pore structure characteristics of
    through pores including fluid flow
    characteristics, which other techniques cannot
    measure

101
Conclusion
  • All characteristics particularly relevant for
    filtration are measurable
  • The techniques do not use toxic materials, high
    pressures or subzero temperatures

102
Conclusion
  • Mercury Intrusion Techniques
  • The widely used mercury intrusion porosimetry has
    been briefly discussed
  • This technique can measure pore volume and pore
    diameters of through and blind pores in almost
    any material

103
Conclusion
  • Fluid flow characteristics cannot be measured
  • Uses very high pressures and mercury, which is
    toxic

104
Conclusion
  • Non- Mercury Intrusion Techniques
  • The novel technique non-mercury intrusion
    porosimetry has been discussed
  • This technique can measure pore volume and
    diameter of through and blind pores like mercury
    intrusion porosimetry

105
Conclusion
  • No toxic material is used and pressure required
    is almost an order of magnitude less.

106
Conclusion
  • Gas adsorption condensation techniques
  • The widely used gas adsorption and condensation
    techniques were discussed briefly
  • These techniques can measure surface area, pore
    diameter and pore volume of through and blind
    pores
  • Characteristics of very small pores are measurable

107
Conclusion
  • Flow properties are not measurable
  • Many require subzero temperatures

108
Thank You
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