Isothermal and thermo-osmotic transport of sorbable gases in microporous carbon membranes

With the use of helium and a series of gases adsorbed to give dilute films, measurements have been made of thermo-osmotic steady-state pressure ratios established across microporous carbon membranes through which linear temperature gradients were maintained. Two contrasting adsorbents were employed: Carbolac I, a carbon black having an energetically heterogeneous high area surface and Graphon, a graphitized carbon black of one-tenth the surface area of Carbolac but energetically homogeneous. Complementary studies of isothermal transport of the gases through the membranes and determination of equilibrium adsorption isotherms at all temperatures employed for the flow experiments were required in order to analyse the non-isothermal experimental results. Part I is concerned with the equilibrium properties of the adsorbed films. Henry’s law constants, k, energies of adsorption, A E'and isosteric heats of adsorption, for the Gibbs excess adsorption were derived from the experimental isotherms. Taking the thickness of the adsorbed layer as one molecular diameter, the corresponding energies, A E,and heats qBt for absolute adsorption have been calculated. For the very dilute films the ratios AE'jAE and q'BtlqBt can differ appreciably from unity. Also in the Henry law range, values of the thermodynamic equilibrium constants and standard energies, AE&, and entropies, A for absolute adsorption have been evaluated. A linear relation between AS& and AE&, was observed. — A was considerably larger on Carbolac than on Graphon surfaces. This has been interpreted in terms of greater mobility of the adsorbed molecules on the more homogeneous Graphon surface. Good correlations have been found between K or A Eand properties, such as polarizability, a, related to the condensability of the sorbates. Part II is concerned with isothermal transport of the gases through the membranes. For the majority of systems studied the permeability, K and time-lag, L, were independent of pressure. For helium in both membranes the ratio K/^T was independent of temperature and pressure, indicating transport only in the gas phase and the absence of a viscous flow component. For an adsorbed gas the extra flux generated by the mobile adsorbed films per unit area of surface, JJA, were considerably greater for the more homogeneous Graphon membrane. Diffusion coefficients associated with the extra fluxes also indicated greater mobility of adsorbed molecules on the more homogeneous surface. Good correlations between K{MT)^ and ke have been demonstrated and, at constant temperature, a linear relation was observed between KM$ and the product, aTb, of polarizability and boiling-point TB. Gas-phase structure factors obtained by the procedure of Barrer & Gabor (1959) were considerably less than unity, indicating a dominant influence in each membrane of tortuosity and bottlenecks. For each membrane a linear relation has been demonstrated between the products KL and kB from which parameters associated with blind pore character have been obtained. Part III is concerned with the thermo-osmotic transport of the gases in the membranes. The nonisothermal flow is formulated in terms of the thermodynamics of irreversible processes and relations derived between the straight phenomenological coefficients of this treatment and the permeabilities and diffusion coefficients of part II. Equations are also presented relating the overall heat of transport, Q0, at temperature T0 to component heats of transport for the gas-phase flow (Qg, Q*) and extra flow (QB, Q*). In none of the systems studied did Q0 = — %RT0, the ideal value expected for a gas transported by molecular streaming (Knudsen flow). For He, H 2 and Ne in the Carbolac membranes, — ifiRT0 where /?, for a particular gas, is a constant < 1. With increasing sorbability of the flowing gas the temperature dependence of Q0 was progressively modified until, in the presence of substantial extra flow, — Q0 decreased strongly with increasing T0. Calculations of Qs and Q* are presented for the two limiting cases Q e— and Qg = 0. It is shown that Qs must always be negative and positive. A procedure for calculating isobaric permeabilities, utilizing a combination of thermo-osmotic steady-state and isothermal steady-state measurements, has been developed. For various pairs of gases, the ratios of isobaric permeabilities differed greatly from the corresponding ratios of isothermal permeabilities. Enhanced separations of sorbable mixtures by isobaric flow appear to be possible especially for the Graphon membrane.

A study has been made of the flow of inert gases and of sulphur hexafluoride through, and of the adsorption of argon and sulphur hexafluoride on, two carbons chosen for the energetic homogeneity of the sorbing surfaces and non-porosity of the individual carbon particles. A wide temperature range has been covered, ‘surface’ and ‘gas phase’ flows of the sorbed gases have been measured using helium as non-sorbed calibrating gas, and the corresponding permeability and diffusion coefficients derived. The smooth, non-porous sorbents chosen were able to produce extra flows considerably greater than those on much larger but porous and broken surfaces of some other sorbents (e. g. active carbons and alumina-silica cracking catalyst). The concentration dependence of the surface diffusion coefficients, D ss , agrees with a treatment of this dependence according to which, in the regime when gas phase diffusion coefficients are independent of pressure, D ss varies inversely as the slope of the isotherm. When fluxes at each of a series of pressures are plotted against temperature, the fluxes pass through maxima as the temperature is lowered. This behaviour can be explained in terms of the simultaneous influence of temperature on D ss and on the concentration gradients.


1982 ◽  
Vol 53 (5) ◽  
pp. 1116-1124 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. P. Cole ◽  
P. C. Sukanek ◽  
J. B. Wittenberg ◽  
B. A. Wittenberg

The effect of myoglobin on oxygen consumption and ATP production by isolated rat skeletal muscle mitochondria was studied under steady-state conditions of oxygen supply. A method is presented for the determination of steady-state oxygen consumption in the presence of oxygen-binding proteins. Oxygen consumed in suspensions of mitochondria was replenished continuously by transfer from a flowing gas phase. Liquid-phase oxygen pressure was measured with an oxygen electrode; the gas-phase oxygen concentration was held constant at a series of fixed values. Oxygen consumption was determined from the characteristic response time of the system and the difference in the steady-state gas- and liquid-phase oxygen concentrations. ATP production was determined from the generation of glucose 6-phosphate in the presence of hexokinase. During steady-state mitochondrial oxygen consumption, the oxygen pressure in the liquid phase is enhanced when myoglobin is present. Functional myoglobin present in the solution had no effect on the relation of mitochondrial respiration and ATP production to liquid-phase oxygen pressure. Myoglobin functions in this system to enhance the flux of oxygen into the myoglobin-containing phase. Myoglobin may function in a similar fashion in muscle by increasing oxygen flux into myocytes.


2007 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 2169-2196 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Kazil ◽  
E. R. Lovejoy

Abstract. The formation of new sulfate aerosol from the gas phase is commonly represented in atmospheric modeling with parameterizations of the steady state nucleation rate. Such parameterizations are based on classical nucleation theory or on aerosol nucleation rate tables, calculated with a numerical aerosol model. These parameterizations reproduce aerosol nucleation rates calculated with a numerical aerosol model only imprecisely. Additional errors can arise when the nucleation rate is used as a surrogate for the production rate of particles of a given size. We discuss these errors and present a method which allows a more precise calculation of steady state sulfate aerosol formation rates. The method is based on the semi-analytical solution of an aerosol system in steady state and on parameterized rate coefficients for H2SO4 uptake and loss by sulfate aerosol particles, calculated from laboratory and theoretical thermodynamic data.


Author(s):  
Maryam Sadat Motallebipour ◽  
Javad Karimi-Sabet

Selective membrane-based separation of light isotopes is considered to be possible based on the quantum phenomena. In this regard, the role of the two mass-dependent effects, quantum tunneling and zero-point...


1992 ◽  
Vol 73 (5) ◽  
pp. 1939-1945 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. M. Postlethwait ◽  
S. D. Langford ◽  
A. Bidani

We previously showed, during quasi-steady-state exposures, that the rate of inhaled NO2 uptake displays reaction-mediated characteristics (J. Appl. Physiol. 68: 594–603, 1990). In vitro kinetic studies of pulmonary epithelial lining fluid (ELF) demonstrated that NO2 interfacial transfer into ELF exhibits first-order kinetics with respect to NO2, attains [NO2]-dependent rate saturation, and is aqueous substrate dependent (J. Appl. Physiol. 71: 1502–1510, 1991). We have extended these observations by evaluating the kinetics of NO2 gas phase disappearance in isolated ventilating rat lungs. Transient exposures (2–3/lung at 25 degrees C) employed rebreathing (NO2-air) from a non-compliant continuously stirred closed chamber. We observed that 1) NO2 uptake rate is independent of exposure period, 2) NO2 gas phase disappearance exhibited first-order kinetics [initial rate (r*) saturation occurred when [NO2] > 11 ppm], 3) the mean effective rate constant (k*) for NO2 gas phase disappearance ([NO2] < or = 11 ppm, tidal volume = 2.3 ml, functional residual capacity = 4 ml, ventilation frequency = 50/min) was 83 +/- 5 ml/min, 4) with [NO2] < or = 11 ppm, k* and r* were proportional to tidal volume, and 5) NO2 fractional uptakes were constant across [NO2] (< or = 11 ppm) and tidal volumes but exceeded quasi-steady-state observations. Preliminary data indicate that this divergence may be related to the inspired PCO2. These results suggest that NO2 reactive uptake within rebreathing isolated lungs follows first-order kinetics and displays initial rate saturation, similar to isolated ELF.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


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