Page 125 - Introduction to Colloid and Surface Chemistry
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5        The solid—gas                   interface







        Adsorption of gases and vapours on solids

        When   a  gas  or  vapour  is  brought  into  contact  with  a  clean  solid
        surface,  some of it will become attached to the  surface  in the  form of
        an adsorbed  layer. The solid is generally referred to as the  adsorbent,
        adsorbed gas or vapour as the adsorbate and non-adsorbed  gas as the
        adsorptive.  It is possible that uniform  absorption  into the  bulk of the
        solid  might  also  take  place,  and,  since  adsorption  and  absorption
        cannot  always  be  distinguished  experimentally,  the  generic  term
        sorption  is sometimes  used  to  describe  the  general  phenomenon of
        gas uptake by solids.
          Any  solid  is  capable  of  adsorbing  a  certain  amount  of  gas,  the
        extent  of  adsorption  at  equilibrium depending  on  temperature,  the
        pressure  of  the  gas  and  the  effective  surface area  of  the  solid.  The
        most  notable  adsorbents  are, therefore,  highly porous  solids, such as
        charcoal and silica gel (which have large internal surface areas -  up to
                     1
        c.  1000  m 2  g" )  and  finely  divided  powders.  The  relationship at  a
        given temperature  between  the  equilibrium amount of gas  adsorbed
        and  the  pressure  of  the  gas  is  known  as  the  adsorption  isotherm
        (Figures  5.1,  5.5-5.6,  5.8,  5.11,  5.13).
          Adsorption  reduces  the  imbalance of attractive forces which  exists
        at  a surface, and, hence,  the  surface free  energy of a  heterogeneous
        system.  In  this  respect,  the  energy  considerations  relating  to  solid
        surfaces  are,  in  principle,  the  same  as  those  already  discussed  for
        liquid  surfaces.  The  main  differences  between  solid  and  liquid
        surfaces  arise  from  the  fact  that solid surfaces are  heterogeneous in
        respect  of  activity,  with  properties  dependent,  to  some  extent,  on
        previous environment.
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