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Journal Articles Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters Year : 2013

Gas Uptake in Solvents Confined in Mesopores: Adsorption versus Enhanced Solubility

L. N. Ho
  • Function : Author
S. Clauzier
  • Function : Author
Y. Schuurman
D. Farrusseng
Benoit Coasne

Abstract

Three molecular mechanisms for gas uptake in a solvent confined in mesopores are identified. On the one hand, CO2 uptake is an adsorption-driven phenomenon that arises from the strong interaction between the gas molecules and the pore surface. On the other hand, H-2 uptake is a confinement-induced enhanced solubility in which solubility is favored in the regions of low solvent density formed by the layering of the solvent. In partially filled pores, adsorption at the gas/liquid solvent interface is a third mechanism that leads to large gas uptakes. This study, which sheds light on previously reported yet unclear oversolubility in pores, provides a guide to design hybrid porous catalysts consisting of a solvent confined in a porous solid.
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hal-00861185 , version 1 (26-07-2021)

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L. N. Ho, S. Clauzier, Y. Schuurman, D. Farrusseng, Benoit Coasne. Gas Uptake in Solvents Confined in Mesopores: Adsorption versus Enhanced Solubility. Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters, 2013, 4, pp.2274-2278. ⟨10.1021/jz401143x⟩. ⟨hal-00861185⟩
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