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Cones shape classification

The geometrical structure of pores is of great concern, but the three-dimensional description of pores is not established in less-crystalline porous solids. Only intrinsic crystalline intra-particle pores offer a good description of the structure. The hysteresis analysis of molecular adsorption isotherms and electron microscopic observation estimate the pore geometry such as cylinder (cylinder closed at one end or cylinder open at both ends), cone shape, slit shape, interstice between closed-packing spheres and inkbottle. However, these models concern with only the unit structures. The higher order structure of these unit pores such as the network structure should be taken into accoimt. The simplest classification of the higher order structures is one-, two- and three-dimensional pores. Some zeolites and aluminophosphates have one-dimensional pores and activated carbons have basically two-dimensional slit-shaped pores with complicated network structures [95]. [Pg.204]

This classification is certainly not perfect because the filling of pores is also determined by their shape (cylinders, slits, cones, irregular) and pores may be separate or connected. [Pg.199]


See other pages where Cones shape classification is mentioned: [Pg.539]    [Pg.73]    [Pg.27]    [Pg.211]    [Pg.81]    [Pg.227]    [Pg.1097]    [Pg.261]    [Pg.66]    [Pg.363]    [Pg.986]    [Pg.986]    [Pg.202]    [Pg.20]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.17 ]




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Classification shape

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