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Solid surfaces, heterogeneity

This commentary on the current status of research on heats of immersion begins where our review written in 1958 concludes [6]. The classification of heats of immersion of solids into liquids as a function of precoverage is expanded to include two new types of curves. Several difficulties in heat of immersion research are discussed. Then, current applications of heats of immersion to determine the average polarity of solid surfaces, heterogeneities on solid surfaces, wetting by surfactants, hydrophilicity of solid surfaces, and thermodynamics of the specific interaction of molecules from solution onto solid surfaces are described. [Pg.88]

Kleijn M. Norde W. The ac rption of proteins from aqueous solution on solid surfaces. Heterogeneous Chonistiy Reviews 1995 2(3) 157-72. [Pg.411]

Reactions Promoted by Solid-Surface/Heterogeneous Catalysts... [Pg.220]

The importance of the solid-liquid interface in a host of applications has led to extensive study over the past 50 years. Certainly, the study of the solid-liquid interface is no easier than that of the solid-gas interface, and all the complexities noted in Section VIM are present. The surface structural and spectroscopic techniques presented in Chapter VIII are not generally applicable to liquids (note, however. Ref. 1). There is, perforce, some retreat to phenomenology, empirical rules, and semiempirical models. The central importance of the Young equation is evident even in its modification to treat surface heterogeneity or roughness. ... [Pg.347]

All gases below their critical temperature tend to adsorb as a result of general van der Waals interactions with the solid surface. In this case of physical adsorption, as it is called, interest centers on the size and nature of adsorbent-adsorbate interactions and on those between adsorbate molecules. There is concern about the degree of heterogeneity of the surface and with the extent to which adsorbed molecules possess translational and internal degrees of freedom. [Pg.571]

Finally, in the case of solids, there is the difficulty that surface atoms and molecules differ in their properties from one location to another. The discussion in Section VII-4 made clear the variety of surface heterogeneities possible in the case of a solid. Those measurements that depend on the state of surface atoms or molecules will generally be influenced differently by such heterogeneities. Different methods of measuring surface area will thus often not only give different absolute values, but may also give different relative values for a series of solids. [Pg.574]

D. A. King and D. P. Woodruff, eds.. The Chemical Physics of Solid Surfaces and Heterogeneous Catalysis, Elsevier, Amsterdam, 1982. [Pg.743]

Catalysis in a single fluid phase (liquid, gas or supercritical fluid) is called homogeneous catalysis because the phase in which it occurs is relatively unifonn or homogeneous. The catalyst may be molecular or ionic. Catalysis at an interface (usually a solid surface) is called heterogeneous catalysis, an implication of this tenn is that more than one phase is present in the reactor, and the reactants are usually concentrated in a fluid phase in contact with the catalyst, e.g., a gas in contact with a solid. Most catalysts used in the largest teclmological processes are solids. The tenn catalytic site (or active site) describes the groups on the surface to which reactants bond for catalysis to occur the identities of the catalytic sites are often unknown because most solid surfaces are nonunifonn in stmcture and composition and difficult to characterize well, and the active sites often constitute a small minority of the surface sites. [Pg.2697]

King D A and Woodruff D P (eds) 1988 Surface properties of electronic materials The Chemical Physics of Solid Surfaces and Heterogeneous Cafa/ys/svol 5 (Amsterdam Elsevier)... [Pg.2939]

Volume 104 Equilibria and Dynamics of Gas Adsorption on Heterogeneous Solid Surfaces edited by W. Rudzihski, W.A. Steele and G. Zgrablich Volume 105 Progress in Zeolite and Microporous Materials... [Pg.266]

Primary nucleation is the classical form of nucleation. It occurs mainly at high levels of supersaturation and is thus most prevalent during unseeded crystallization or precipitation. This mode of nucleation may be subdivided into either homogeneous viz. spontaneously from clear solution, or heterogeneous viz. in the presence of dust particles in suspension, or solid surfaces. [Pg.125]

The effects due to the finite size of crystallites (in both lateral directions) and the resulting effects due to boundary fields have been studied by Patrykiejew [57], with help of Monte Carlo simulation. A solid surface has been modeled as a collection of finite, two-dimensional, homogeneous regions and each region has been assumed to be a square lattice of the size Lx L (measured in lattice constants). Patches of different size contribute to the total surface with different weights described by a certain size distribution function C L). Following the basic assumption of the patchwise model of surface heterogeneity [6], the patches have been assumed to be independent one of another. [Pg.269]

W. Rudzinski, G. Zgrablich, eds. Equilibria dynamics of gas adsorption on heterogeneous solid surfaces. In Studies in Surface Science and Catalysis, Vol 104. Amsterdam Elsevier, 1997. [Pg.287]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.232 , Pg.313 , Pg.418 ]




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