Ultrasound Propagation in Water-Sorbing Carbon Xerogel
Ashoka Karunarathne, Stephan Braxmeier, Boris Gurevich, Alexei F., Khalizov, Gudrun Reichenauer, Gennady Y. Gor

TL;DR
This study uses ultrasonic wave propagation measurements to investigate water vapor adsorption in nanoporous carbon xerogel, revealing differences in confined water properties within micropores and mesopores, and demonstrating a nondestructive method to analyze adsorption mechanisms.
Contribution
It introduces ultrasonic testing as a nondestructive technique to analyze water adsorption and pore filling in nanoporous materials, providing insights into the spatial distribution and properties of confined water.
Findings
Confined water in mesopores exhibits bulk-like elastic properties.
Ultrasonic attenuation increases during micropore filling, indicating heterogeneity.
Ultrasonic measurements effectively probe fluid properties and distribution in nanopores.
Abstract
Adsorption of water vapor in nanoporous carbons is rather complex due to an interplay between the pore structure and surface chemistry of these materials. Deciphering the mechanism of adsorption requires the knowledge of the spatial distribution and the filling fraction of the adsorbed water. Characteristics of ultrasonic wave propagation through a nanoporous sample provides a wealth of information such as properties of fluids confined in the pores and spatial distribution of adsorbate in the pores. Here we studied water vapor adsorption on carbon xerogel, with a bimodal pore size distribution consisting of micropores (1 nm) and mesopores (8 nm) and overall porosity 68%. The relative humidity was increased in steps and the amount of water adsorbed by the sample was measured gravimetrically at each step, producing a type V isotherm, characteristic of water adsorption to weakly…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMethane Hydrates and Related Phenomena · Aerogels and thermal insulation
