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The Langmuir adsorption model is the most common model used to quantify the amount of adsorbate adsorbed on an adsorbent as a function of partial pressure or concentration at a given temperature. It considers adsorption of an ideal gas onto an idealized surface. The gas is presumed to bind at a series of distinct sites on the surface of the solid as indicated in Figure 1, and the adsorption process was treated as a reaction where a gas molecule reacts with an empty site, S, to yield an adsorbed complex
Fig 1. An schematic showing equivalent sites, occupied(blue) and unoccupied(red) clarifying the basic assumptions used in the model. The adsorption sites(heavy dots) are equivalent and can have unit occupancy. Also, the adsorbates are immobile on the surface
Contents
1 Basic assumptions of the model 2 Derivations of the Langmuir Adsorption Isotherm 2.1 Kinetic Derivation 2.2 Statistical Mechanical Derivation 2.3 Competitive Adsorption 2.4 Dissociative Adsorption 3 Entropic considerations 4 Disadvantages of the model 5 Modifications of the Langmuir Adsorption Model 5.1 The Freundlich Adsorption Isotherm 5.2 The Temkin Adsorption Isotherm 5.3 BET equation 6 Adsorption of binary liquid adsorption on solids 7 References
where PA is the partial pressure of A over the surface, [S] is the concentration of bare sites in number/m, [Aad ] is the surface concentration of A in molecules/m, and k ad and k d are constants. At equilibrium, the rate of adsorption equals the rate of desorption. Setting rad =rd and rearranging, we obtain:
The concentration of all sites [S0 ] is the sum of the concentration of free sites [S] and of occupied sites:
We define now the fraction of the surface sites covered with A, A , as:
This, applied to the previous equation that combined site balance and equilibrium, yields the Langmuir
adsorption isotherm:
This derivation [4] was originally provided by Volmer and Mahnert[5] in 1925. The partition function of the finite number of adsorbents adsorbed on a surface, in a canonical ensemble is given by
where is the partition function of a single adsorbed molecule, are the number of sites available for adsorption. Hence, N, which is the number of molecules that can be adsorbed, can be less or equal to Ns . The first term of Z(n) accounts the total partition function of the different molecules by taking a product of the individual partition functions (Refer to Partition function of subsystems). The latter term accounts for the overcounting arising due to the indistinguishable nature of the adsorption sites. The grand canonical partition function is given by
where The Landau free energy, which is generalized Helmholtz free energy is given by
According to the Maxwell relations regarding the change of the Helmholtz free energy with respect to the chemical potential,
which gives
Now, invoking the condition that the system is in equilibrium, the chemical potential of the adsorbates is equal to that of the gas surroundings the absorbent.
An example plot of the surface coverage A = P/(P+P0) with respect to the partial pressure of the adsorbate. P0 = 100mtorr. The graph shows levelling off of the surface coverage at pressures higher than P0.
where N3D is the number of gas molecules, Z3D is the partition function of the gas molecules and Ag =-kBT ln Zg . Further, we get
where
Finally, we have
It is plotted in the figure alongside demonstrating the surface coverage increases quite rapidly with the partial pressure of the adsorbants but levels off after P reaches P0.
Competitive Adsorption
The previous derivations assumes that there is only one species, A, adsorbing onto the surface. This section [6]
considers the case when there are two distinct adsorbates present in the system.Consider two species A and B that compete for the same adsorption sites. The following assumptions are applied here: 1. All the sites are equivalent. 2. Each site can hold at most one molecule of A or one molecule of B, but not both. 3. There are no interactions between adsorbate molecules on adjacent sites. As derived using kinetical considerations, the equilibrium constants for both A and B are given by
and
The site balance states that the concentration of total sites [S0 ] is equal to the sum of free sites, sites occupied by A and sites occupied by B:
Inserting the equilibrium equations and rearranging in the same way we did for the single-species adsorption, we get similar expressions for both A and B:
Dissociative Adsorption
The other case of special importance is when a molecule D2 dissociates into two atoms upon adsorption.[7] Here, the following assumptions would be held to be valid: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. D2 completely dissociates to two molecules of D upon adsorption. The D atoms adsorb onto distinct sites on the surface of the solid and then move around and equilibrate. All sites are equivalent. Each site can hold at most one atom of D. There are no interactions between adsorbate molecules on adjacent sites.
The 1/2 exponent on pD2 arises because one gas phase molecule produces two adsorbed species. Applying the
Entropic considerations
The formation of Langmuir monolayers by adsorption onto a surface dramatically reduces the entropy of the molecular system. This conflicts with the second law of thermodynamics, which states that entropy will increase in an isolated system. This implies that either another locally active force is stronger than the thermodynamic potential, or that our expression of the entropy of the system is incomplete. To find the entropy decrease, we find the entropy of the molecule when in the adsorbed condition.[8]
where
The modifications try to account for the points mentioned in above section like surface roughness, inhomogeneity, and adsorbate-adsorbate interactions.
where F and CF are fitting parameters.[9] This equation implies that if one makes a log-log plot of adsorption data, the data will fit a straight line. The Freundlich isotherm has two parameters while Langmuir's equations has only one: as a result, it often fits the data on rough surfaces better than the Langmuir's equations. A related equation is the Toth equation. Rearranging the Langmuir equation, one can obtain:
Toth[10] modified this equation by adding two parameters, T0 and CT0 to formulate the Toth equation:
He derived a model assuming that as the surface is loaded up with adsorbate, the heat of adsorption of all the molecules in the layer would decrease linearly with coverage due to adsorbate/adsorbate interactions:
where T is a fitting parameter. Assuming the Langmuir Adsorption isotherm still applied to the adsorbed layer, is expected to vary with coverage, as follows:
Substituting the expression of the equilibrium constant and taking the natural logarithm:
BET equation
Main article: BET theory Brunauer, Emmett and Teller[12] derived the first isotherm for multilayer adsorption. It assumes a random distribution of sites that are empty or that are covered with by one monolayer, two layers and so on, as illustrated alongside. The main equation of this model is:
Brunauer's model of multilayer adsorption, that is, a random distribution of sites covered by one, two, three, etc., adsorbate molecules.
where
and [A] is the total concentration of molecules on the surface, given by:
where
in which [A] 0 is the number of bare sites, and [A] i is the number of surface sites covered by i molecules.
binary liquid system in contact with solid surface is given by a classic Everett isotherm equation (being a simple analogue of Langmuir equation), where the components are interchangeable (i.e. "1" may be exchanged to "2") without change of eq. form:
References
1. ^ Principles of Adsorption and Reaction on Solid Surfaces. Wiley Interscience. 1996. pp. 240. ISBN 0-47130392-5. 2. ^ Principles of Adsorption and Reaction on Solid Surfaces. Wiley Interscience. 1996. pp. 240. ISBN 0-47130392-5. 3. ^ Cahill, David (2008). "Lecture Notes 5 Page 2" (http://www.library.uiuc.edu/ereserves/item.asp?id=35598) (pdf). University of Illinois, Urbana Champaign. http://www.library.uiuc.edu/ereserves/item.asp?id=35598. Retrieved 2008-11-09. 4. ^ Principles of Adsorption and Reaction on Solid Surfaces. Wiley Interscience. 1996. pp. 242. ISBN 0-47130392-5. 5. ^ Volmer, M.A., and P. Mahnert, Z. Physik. Chem 115, 253 6. ^ Principles of Adsorption and Reaction on Solid Surfaces. Wiley Interscience. 1996. pp. 244. ISBN 0-47130392-5. 7. ^ Principles of Adsorption and Reaction on Solid Surfaces. Wiley Interscience. 1996. pp. 244. ISBN 0-47130392-5. 8. ^ Cahill, David (2008). "Lecture Notes 5 Page 13" (http://www.library.uiuc.edu/ereserves/item.asp?id=35598) (pdf). University of Illinois, Urbana Champaign. http://www.library.uiuc.edu/ereserves/item.asp?id=35598. Retrieved 2008-11-09. 9. ^ Freundlich, H. Kapillarchemie, Academishe Bibliotek, Leipzig (1909) 10. ^ Toth, J., Acta. Chim. Acad. Sci. Hung 69, 311(1971) 11. ^ Temkin, M.I., and V. Pyzhev, Acta Physiochim. URSS 12,217(1940) 12. ^ J. Am. Chem. Soc 60,309 13. ^ Marczewski, A. W (2002). "Basics of Liquid Adsorption" (http://www.adsorption.org/awm/ads/Basics.htm#Liquid) . http://www.adsorption.org/awm/ads/Basics.htm#Liquid. Retrieved 2008-11-24.
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