Tracking
Nanoparticle Diffusion in Porous Filtration
Media
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Abstract
Porous materials are used extensively
in industrial filtration
and mass separation processes, but it is often difficult to predict
their mass transport behavior because porous materials are an inherently
heterogeneous medium and multiple microscopic mechanisms can lead
to macroscopic changes in transport. To provide a microscopic view
of hindered porous transport, we present the results of single-particle
tracking experiments in which we followed the diffusive motion of
individual nanoparticles in commercial filtration media. We compared
two materials, glass fiber and nitrocellulose, with similar nominal
characteristics, but we found that the diffusion behavior of the embedded
particles differed significantly. While diffusion in the glass fiber
material was nearly unhindered, the dynamics were heterogeneous and
significantly slowed in the nitrocellulose. We rationalized the observations
based on differences in geometric hindrance, particle binding, and
hydrodynamic interactions. Our results highlight the ability of single-particle
tracking to differentiate between distinct dynamic mechanisms, and
they suggest that nominal material characteristics may be a poor predictor
of transport properties