Abstract :
Adsorption of argon and nitrogen at their respective boiling points in cylindrical pores of MCM-41 type silica-like adsorbents
is studied by means of a non-local density functional theory (NLDFT), which is modified to deal with amorphous solids. By
matching the theoretical results of the pore filling pressure versus pore diameter against the experimental data, we arrive at a
conclusion that the adsorption branch (rather than desorption) corresponds to the true thermodynamic equilibrium. If this is
accepted, we derive the optimal values for the solid–fluid molecular parameters for the system amorphous silica–Ar and
amorphous silica–N2, and at the same time we could derive reliably the specific surface area of non-porous and mesoporous
silica-like adsorbents, without a recourse to the BET method. This method is then logically extended to describe the local
adsorption isotherms of argon and nitrogen in silica-like pores, which are then used as the bases (kernel) to determine the pore
size distribution.We test this with a number of adsorption isotherms on the MCM-41 samples, and the results are quite realistic
and in excellent agreement with the XRD results, justifying the approach adopted in this paper.
Keywords :
Density functional theory , capillary condensation , MCM-41 , adsorption