Literature DB >> 22369098

Direct measurements of pore fluid density by vibrating tube densimetry.

Miroslaw S Gruszkiewicz1, Gernot Rother, David J Wesolowski, David R Cole, Dirk Wallacher.   

Abstract

The densities of pore-confined fluids were measured for the first time by means of vibrating tube densimetry (VTD). A custom-built high-pressure, high-temperature vibrating tube densimeter was used to measure the densities of propane at subcritical and supercritical temperatures (between 35 and 97 °C) and carbon dioxide at supercritical temperatures (between 32 and 50 °C) saturating hydrophobic silica aerogel (0.2 g/cm(3), 90% porosity) synthesized inside Hastelloy U-tubes. Additionally, supercritical isotherms of excess adsorption for CO(2) and the same porous solid were measured gravimetrically using a precise magnetically coupled microbalance. Pore fluid densities and total adsorption isotherms increased monotonically with increasing density of the bulk fluid, in contrast to excess adsorption isotherms, which reached a maximum and then decreased toward zero or negative values above the critical density of the bulk fluid. The isotherms of confined fluid density and excess adsorption obtained by VTD contain additional information. For instance, the maxima of excess adsorption occur below the critical density of the bulk fluid at the beginning of the plateau region in the total adsorption, marking the end of the transition of pore fluid to a denser, liquidlike pore phase. Compression of the confined fluid significantly beyond the density of the bulk fluid at the same temperature was observed even at subcritical temperatures. The effect of pore confinement on the liquid-vapor critical temperature of propane was less than ~1.7 K. The results for propane and carbon dioxide showed similarity in the sense of the principle of corresponding states. Good quantitative agreement was obtained between excess adsorption isotherms determined from VTD total adsorption results and those measured gravimetrically at the same temperature, confirming the validity of the vibrating tube measurements. Thus, it is demonstrated that vibrating tube densimetry is a novel experimental approach capable of providing directly the average density of pore-confined fluids, and hence complementary to the conventional gravimetric or volumetric/piezometric adsorption techniques, which yield the excess adsorption (the Gibbsian surface excess).

Entities:  

Year:  2012        PMID: 22369098     DOI: 10.1021/la204517v

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Langmuir        ISSN: 0743-7463            Impact factor:   3.882


  2 in total

1.  Structure and dynamics of ethane confined in silica nanopores in the presence of CO2.

Authors:  Tingting Liu; Siddharth Gautam; David R Cole; Sumant Patankar; David Tomasko; Wei Zhou; Gernot Rother
Journal:  J Chem Phys       Date:  2020-02-28       Impact factor: 3.488

2.  A Novel Slope Method for Measurement of Fluid Density with a Micro-cantilever under Flexural and Torsional Vibrations.

Authors:  Libo Zhao; Yingjie Hu; Rahman Hebibul; Jianjun Ding; Tongdong Wang; Tingzhong Xu; Xixiang Liu; Yulong Zhao; Zhuangde Jiang
Journal:  Sensors (Basel)       Date:  2016-09-11       Impact factor: 3.576

  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.