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Adiabatic burst evaporation from bicontinuous nanoporous membranes

Evaporation of volatile liquids from nanoporous media with bicontinuous morphology and pore diameters of a few 10 nm is an ubiquitous process. For example, such drying processes occur during syntheses of nanoporous materials by sol–gel chemistry or by spinodal decomposition in the presence of solven...

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Autores principales: Ichilmann, Sachar, Rücker, Kerstin, Haase, Markus, Enke, Dirk, Steinhart, Martin, Xue, Longjian
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Royal Society of Chemistry 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4718142/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25926406
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c5nr01402f
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author Ichilmann, Sachar
Rücker, Kerstin
Haase, Markus
Enke, Dirk
Steinhart, Martin
Xue, Longjian
author_facet Ichilmann, Sachar
Rücker, Kerstin
Haase, Markus
Enke, Dirk
Steinhart, Martin
Xue, Longjian
author_sort Ichilmann, Sachar
collection PubMed
description Evaporation of volatile liquids from nanoporous media with bicontinuous morphology and pore diameters of a few 10 nm is an ubiquitous process. For example, such drying processes occur during syntheses of nanoporous materials by sol–gel chemistry or by spinodal decomposition in the presence of solvents as well as during solution impregnation of nanoporous hosts with functional guests. It is commonly assumed that drying is endothermic and driven by non-equilibrium partial pressures of the evaporating species in the gas phase. We show that nearly half of the liquid evaporates in an adiabatic mode involving burst-like liquid-to-gas conversions. During single adiabatic burst evaporation events liquid volumes of up to 10(7) μm(3) are converted to gas. The adiabatic liquid-to-gas conversions occur if air invasion fronts get unstable because of the built-up of high capillary pressures. Adiabatic evaporation bursts propagate avalanche-like through the nanopore systems until the air invasion fronts have reached new stable configurations. Adiabatic cavitation bursts thus compete with Haines jumps involving air invasion front relaxation by local liquid flow without enhanced mass transport out of the nanoporous medium and prevail if the mean pore diameter is in the range of a few 10 nm. The results reported here may help optimize membrane preparation via solvent-based approaches, solution-loading of nanopore systems with guest materials as well as routine use of nanoporous membranes with bicontinuous morphology and may contribute to better understanding of adsorption/desorption processes in nanoporous media.
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spelling pubmed-47181422016-02-03 Adiabatic burst evaporation from bicontinuous nanoporous membranes Ichilmann, Sachar Rücker, Kerstin Haase, Markus Enke, Dirk Steinhart, Martin Xue, Longjian Nanoscale Chemistry Evaporation of volatile liquids from nanoporous media with bicontinuous morphology and pore diameters of a few 10 nm is an ubiquitous process. For example, such drying processes occur during syntheses of nanoporous materials by sol–gel chemistry or by spinodal decomposition in the presence of solvents as well as during solution impregnation of nanoporous hosts with functional guests. It is commonly assumed that drying is endothermic and driven by non-equilibrium partial pressures of the evaporating species in the gas phase. We show that nearly half of the liquid evaporates in an adiabatic mode involving burst-like liquid-to-gas conversions. During single adiabatic burst evaporation events liquid volumes of up to 10(7) μm(3) are converted to gas. The adiabatic liquid-to-gas conversions occur if air invasion fronts get unstable because of the built-up of high capillary pressures. Adiabatic evaporation bursts propagate avalanche-like through the nanopore systems until the air invasion fronts have reached new stable configurations. Adiabatic cavitation bursts thus compete with Haines jumps involving air invasion front relaxation by local liquid flow without enhanced mass transport out of the nanoporous medium and prevail if the mean pore diameter is in the range of a few 10 nm. The results reported here may help optimize membrane preparation via solvent-based approaches, solution-loading of nanopore systems with guest materials as well as routine use of nanoporous membranes with bicontinuous morphology and may contribute to better understanding of adsorption/desorption processes in nanoporous media. Royal Society of Chemistry 2015-05-14 2015-05-28 /pmc/articles/PMC4718142/ /pubmed/25926406 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c5nr01402f Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2015 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Chemistry
Ichilmann, Sachar
Rücker, Kerstin
Haase, Markus
Enke, Dirk
Steinhart, Martin
Xue, Longjian
Adiabatic burst evaporation from bicontinuous nanoporous membranes
title Adiabatic burst evaporation from bicontinuous nanoporous membranes
title_full Adiabatic burst evaporation from bicontinuous nanoporous membranes
title_fullStr Adiabatic burst evaporation from bicontinuous nanoporous membranes
title_full_unstemmed Adiabatic burst evaporation from bicontinuous nanoporous membranes
title_short Adiabatic burst evaporation from bicontinuous nanoporous membranes
title_sort adiabatic burst evaporation from bicontinuous nanoporous membranes
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4718142/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25926406
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c5nr01402f
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