Multilevel Morphology of Complex Nanoporous Materials

Langmuir. 2018 Jun 12;34(23):6719-6726. doi: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.8b00970. Epub 2018 May 31.

Abstract

This work exploits gas adsorption and small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) to determine the morphology of complex nanoporous materials. We resolve multiple classes of porosity including previously undetected large-scale texture that significantly compromises the canonical interpretation of gas adsorption. Specifically, a UVM-7 class mesoporous silica was synthesized that has morphological features on three length scales: macropores due to packing of 150 nm globules, 1.9 nm radius spherical mesopores inside the globules, and >7 nm pockets on and between the globules. The total and external surface areas, as well as the mesopore volume, were determined using gas adsorption (αs-plot) and SAXS. A new approach was applied to the SAXS data using multilevel fitting to determine the surface areas on multiple length scales. The SAXS analysis code is applicable to any two-phase system and is freely available to the public. The total surface area determined by SAXS was 12% greater than that obtained by gas adsorption. The macropore interfacial area, however, is only 30% of the external surface area determined by the αs-plot. The overestimation of the external surface area by the αs-plot method is attributed to capillary condensation in nanoscale surface irregularities. The discrepancy is resolved assuming that the macropore-globule interfaces harbor fractally distributed nooks and crannies, which lead to gas adsorption at pressures above the mesopore filling pressure.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.