Simplified crossover droplet model for adsorption of pure fluids in slit pores

J Chem Phys. 2004 May 1;120(17):8241-52. doi: 10.1063/1.1665507.

Abstract

We present a generalized crossover (GC) model for the excess adsorption of pure fluids at a flat solid-liquid interface, which reproduces scaling behavior of the excess adsorption in the critical region and is reduced to the classical, van der Waals-type analytical model far away from the bulk critical point. In developing this model, we used the density-functional theory (DFT) approach for the order parameter profile calculations with a generalized corresponding states model for the local free-energy density. The GC DFT model well represents the available experimental adsorption data for Kr/graphite, C2H4/graphite, C3H8/graphite, CO2/silica, and SF6/graphite systems in the entire density range 0 < rho < or = 3rhoc and temperatures up to 1.7Tc. In the critical region 0.5 rhoc < r < or = 1.5rhoc and T < or = 1.15Tc, the GC DFT model is consistent with the predictions of the asymptotic renormalization-group crossover model for the critical adsorption in a semi-infinite system developed earlier. For the excess adsorption on the critical isochore, both theories predict a scaling-law behavior Gamma proportional tau(-nu+beta), but fail to reproduce a "critical depletion" of the excess adsorption along the critical isochore of the SF6/graphite system near Tc. We show that an anomalous decrease of adsorption observed in this system at tau = T/Tc - 1 < 10(-2) can be explained by finite-size effect and develop a simplified crossover droplet (SCD) model for the excess adsorption in a slit pore. With the effective size of the pore of L = 50 nm, the SCD model reproduces all available experimental data for SF6/graphite, including the critical isochore data where tau-->0, within experimental accuracy. At L >> xib (where xib is a bulk correlation length) the SCD model is transformed into the GC DFT model for semi-infinite systems. Application of the SCD model to the excess adsorption of carbon dioxide on the silica gel is also discussed.