Influence of Elastic Strains on the Adsorption Process in Porous Materials. An Experimental Approach
Annie Grosman, Camille Ortega

TL;DR
This study experimentally demonstrates how elastic deformation of porous silicon influences adsorption behavior, showing that substrate constraints affect pore filling and hysteresis, with implications for designing porous materials.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the role of elastic strains on adsorption in porous materials, comparing supported and free-standing layers to reveal deformation effects.
Findings
Supported layers exhibit higher adsorption and hysteresis at lower pressures.
Removing the substrate relaxes elastic strains, altering adsorption isotherms.
Layer thickness influences stress relaxation and adsorption behavior.
Abstract
The experimental results presented in this paper show the influence of the elastic deformation of porous solids on the adsorption process. With p+-type porous silicon formed on highly boron doped (100) Si single crystal, we can make identical porous layers, either supported by or detached from the substrate. The pores are perpendicular to the substrate. The adsorption isotherms corresponding to these two layers are distinct. In the region preceding capillary condensation, the adsorbed amount is lower for the membrane than for the supported layer and the hysteresis loop is observed at higher pressure. We attribute this phenomenon to different elastic strains undergone by the two layers during the adsorption process. For the supported layer, the planes perpendicular to the substrate are constrained to have the same interatomic spacing as that of the substrate so that the elastic…
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