Kinetics of adsorption from a solution. Role of the diffusion and of the adsorption-desorption antagonism

1968 ◽  
Vol 72 (8) ◽  
pp. 2755-2758 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. F. Baret
Soft Matter ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (8) ◽  
pp. 1890-1890 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ivan L. Minkov ◽  
Dimitrinka Arabadzhieva ◽  
Ibrahim E. Salama ◽  
Elena Mileva ◽  
Radomir I. Slavchov

Correction for ‘Barrier kinetics of adsorption–desorption of alcohol monolayers on water under constant surface tension’ by Ivan L. Minkov et al., Soft Matter, 2019, DOI: 10.1039/c8sm02076k.


2016 ◽  
Vol 113 (41) ◽  
pp. 11465-11470 ◽  
Author(s):  
Birte Riechers ◽  
Florine Maes ◽  
Elias Akoury ◽  
Benoît Semin ◽  
Philipp Gruner ◽  
...  

Emulsions are metastable dispersions. Their lifetimes are directly related to the dynamics of surfactants. We design a microfluidic method to measure the kinetics of adsorption of surfactants to the droplet interface, a key process involved in foaming, emulsification, and droplet coarsening. The method is based on the pH decay in the droplet as a direct measurement of the adsorption of a carboxylic acid surfactant to the interface. From the kinetic measurement of the bulk equilibration of the pH, we fully determine the adsorption process of the surfactant. The small droplet size and the convection during the droplet flow ensure that the transport of surfactant through the bulk is not limiting the kinetics of adsorption. To validate our measurements, we show that the adsorption process determines the timescale required to stabilize droplets against coalescence, and we show that the interface should be covered at more than 90% to prevent coalescence. We therefore quantitatively link the process of adsorption/desorption, the stabilization of emulsions, and the kinetics of solute partitioning—here through ion exchange—unraveling the timescales governing these processes. Our method can be further generalized to other surfactants, including nonionic surfactants, by making use of fluorophore–surfactant interactions.


2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maximilian Schalenbach ◽  
Y. Emre Durmus ◽  
Hermann Tempel ◽  
Hans Kungl ◽  
Rüdiger-A. Eichel

Abstract Pseudocapacitances such as the hydrogen adsorption on platinum (HAoPt) are associated with faradaic chemical processes that appear as capacitive in their potentiodynamic response, which was reported to result from the kinetics of adsorption processes. This study discusses an alternative interpretation of the partly capacitive response of the HAoPt that is based on the proton transport of ad- or desorbed hydrogen in the double layer. Potentiodynamic perturbations of equilibrated surface states of the HAoPt lead to typical double layer responses with the characteristic resistive-capacitive relaxations that overshadow the fast adsorption kinetics. A potential-dependent double layer representation by a dynamic transmission line model incorporates the HAoPt in terms of capacitive contributions and can computationally reconstruct the charge exchanged in full range cyclic voltammetry data. The coupling of charge transfer with double layer dynamics displays a novel physicochemical theory to explain the phenomenon of pseudocapacitance and the mechanisms in thereon based supercapacitors.


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