Capillary rise dynamics of liquid hydrocarbons in mesoporous silica as explored by gravimetry, optical and neutron imaging: Nano-rheology and determination of pore size distributions from the shape of imbibition fronts
Simon Gruener, Helen E. Hermes, Burkhard Schillinger, Stefan U., Egelhaaf, and Patrick Huber

TL;DR
This study investigates the capillary infiltration of hydrocarbons in mesoporous silica using gravimetry, optical, and neutron imaging, revealing pore size effects, boundary layer influences, and potential for pore size distribution determination.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of imbibition dynamics in mesoporous silica, introducing methods to extract pore size distributions from front broadening and identifying velocity slip phenomena.
Findings
Lucas-Washburn kinetics observed for various hydrocarbons
Pore size distributions can be derived from front broadening
Velocity slip or reduced viscosity effects identified for C60
Abstract
We present gravimetrical, optical, and neutron imaging measurements of the capillarity-driven infiltration of mesoporous silica glass by hydrocarbons. Square-root-of-time Lucas-Washburn invasion kinetics are found for linear alkanes from n-decane (C10) to n-hexacontane (C60) and for squalane, a branched alkane, in porous Vycor with 6.5 nm or 10 nm pore diameter, respectively. Humidity-dependent experiments allow us to study the influence on the imbibition kinetics of water layers adsorbed on the pore walls. Except for the longest molecule studied, C60, the invasion kinetics can be described by bulk fluidity and bulk capillarity, provided we assume a sticking, pore-wall adsorbed boundary layer, i.e. a monolayer of water covered by a monolayer of flat-laying hydrocarbons. For C60, however, an enhanced imbibition speed compared to the value expected in the bulk is found. This suggests the…
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