342 research outputs found

    Signals in post-war ruins, five orders of magnitude and pore spaces explored by NMR diffusometry

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    The 10th Bologna Conference on “Magnetic Resonance in Porous Media” was among the impressive events which, dedicated to the 600th anniversary of Leipzig University in December 2009, attracted colleagues from all over the world. The conference excursion took the participants to Ferropolis, a place north of Leipzig, equipped with impressive remainings of an old mining site, including huge conveyer bridges. Ferropolis also visualizes, in some way, Leipzig as a center of industry and science, with coal mining in its vicinity as one of the sources of industrial development and, hence, as a promoter of scientific progress. With pleasure I followed the invitation to talk on this occasion, by merging a plenary lecture with an after-dinner speech, about Leipzig’s special affection towards the topic of the conference. This contribution is a reproduction of my talk, accompanied by most of the presented slides

    Exploring guest dynamics in nanoporous host materials

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    Diffusion is an omnipresent phenomenon in nature. In the world of molecules, it describes their irregular thermal motion. The interplay of diffusion and interaction of molecules with pore walls of nanoporous materials constitutes the benefit of using such materials in applications of separation and catalysis. The need for understanding the rate-limiting mechanisms, further optimization and development of new processes makes this topic subject of continued fundamental research [1]

    Assessing one-dimensional diffusion in nanoporous materials from transient concentration profiles

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    The use of interference microscopy has enabled the direct observation of transient concentration profiles generated by intracrystalline transport diffusion in nanoporous materials. The thus accessible intracrystalline concentration profiles contain a wealth of information which cannot be deduced by any macroscopic method. In this paper, we illustrate five different ways for determining the concentration-dependent diffusivity in one-dimensional systems and two for the surface permeability. These methods are discussed by application to concentration profiles evolving during the uptake of methanol by the zeolite ferrierite and of methanol by the metal organic framework (MOF) manganese(II) formate. We show that the diffusivity can be calculated most precisely by means of Fick’s 1st law. As the circumstances permit, Boltzmann’s integration method also yields very precise results. Furthermore, we present a simple procedure that enables the estimation of the influence of the surface barrier on the overal

    "Two-step" model of molecular diffusion in silicalite

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    The influence of the particle "memory" on long-range diffusion in the channel network of silicalite is taken into account by considering pairs of subsequent steps between the channel intersections. It is shown that in this case the correlation rule between the principal elements of the diffusion tensor has to be modified by including an additional term, which takes account of the deviation of molecular propagation from complete randomness. The obtained relations are discussed in terms of molecular dynamics simulations of ethane in silicalite

    Molecular diffusion under confinement

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    With reference to molecular transport in manifold media of porous structure, a survey is given on the ample spectrum of diffusion phenomena under confinement. The presentation is mainly based on the evidence provided by pulsed field gradient NMR and by interference and IR microscopy. These "microscopic" techniques of diffusion measurement are particularly powerful for exploring the diverse features of molecular propagation in complex systems. The presented data cover the peculiarities of molecular diffusion under the regime of "intracrystalline" zeolitic diffusion, refer to deviations from normal diffusion and deal with the practically particularly important case where the overall diffusion process includes molecular propagation in the gas phase. In many cases, the reported experimental studies have been performed in immediate response to theoretical issues including single-file diffusion and sorption hysteresis. Simultaneously, they have given rise to new challenges for basic research correlating equilibrium and non-equilibrium phenomena of molecular propagation

    Diffusion in Nanoporous Materials: Challenges, Surprises and Tasks of the Day

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    Diffusion is an omnipresent, most fundamental phenomenon in nature and thus critical for the performance of numerous technologies. This is in particular true for nanoporous materials with manifold applications for matter upgrading by separation, purification and conversion. The path lengths of molecular transportation within the industrial plants range from the elementary steps of diffusion within the micropores of the individual particles up to the matter flow over macroscopic distances. Each of them might be decisive in determining overall performance so that detailed knowledge of all modes of mass transfer is crucial for a knowledge-based optimization of the devices with reference to their transport properties. The rate of mass transfer is particularly complicated to be assessed within the individual (adsorbent) particles/crystallites with pore sizes of the order of molecular dimensions. We are going to present two powerful techniques exactly for this application, operating under both equilibrium (Pulsed Field Gradient (PFG) NMR) and non-equilibrium (Microimaging by interference microscopy and IR microscopy) conditions. The potentials of these techniques are demonstrated in a few showcases, notably including the options of transport enhancement in pore hierarchies. The contribution concludes with a survey on present activities within an IUPAC initiative aiming at the elaboration of “guidelines for measurements and reporting of diffusion properties of chemical compounds in nanoporous materials”

    Diffusion in Nanoporous Materials: Novel Insights by Combining MAS and PFG NMR

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    Pulsed field gradient (PFG) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) allows recording of molecular diffusion paths (notably, the probability distribution of molecular displacements over typically micrometers, covered during an observation time of typically milliseconds) and has thus proven to serve as a most versatile means for the in-depth study of mass transfer in complex materials. This is particularly true with nanoporous host materials, where PFG NMR enabled the first direct measurement of intracrystalline diffusivities of guest molecules. Spatial resolution, i.e., the minimum diffusion path length experimentally observable, is limited by the time interval over which the pulsed field gradients may be applied. In “conventional” PFG NMR measurements, this time interval is determined by a characteristic quantity of the host-guest system under study, the so-called transverse nuclear magnetic relaxation time. This leads, notably when considering systems with low molecular mobilities, to severe restrictions in the applicability of PFG NMR. These restrictions may partially be released by performing PFG NMR measurements in combination with “magic-angle spinning” (MAS) of the NMR sample tube. The present review introduces the fundamentals of this technique and illustrates, via a number of recent cases, the gain in information thus attainable. Examples include diffusion measurements with nanoporous host-guest systems of low intrinsic mobility and selective diffusion measurement in multicomponent systems
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