Measuring nanopore size from the spin-lattice relaxation of CF4 gas |
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Authors: | Kuethe Dean O Montaño Rebecca Pietrass Tanja |
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Affiliation: | New Mexico Resonance, Albuquerque, NM 87106, USA. dkuethe@nmr.org |
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Abstract: | The NMR 19F spin-lattice relaxation time constant T1 for CF4 gas is dominated by spin-rotation interaction, which is mediated by the molecular collision frequency. When confined to pores of approximately the same size or smaller than the bulk gas mean free path, additional collisions of molecules with the pore walls should substantially change T1. To develop a method for measuring the surface/volume ratio S/V by measuring how T1 changes with confinement, we prepared samples of known S/V from fumed silica of known mass-specific surface area and compressed to varying degrees into cylinders of known volume. We then measured T1 for CF4 in these samples at varying pressures, and developed mathematical models for the change in T1 to fit the data. Even though CF4 has a critical temperature below room temperature, we found that its density in pores was greater than that of the bulk gas and that it was necessary to take this absorption into account. We modeled adsorption in two ways, by assuming that the gas condenses on the pore walls, and by assuming that gas in a region near the wall is denser than the bulk gas because of a simplified attractive potential. Both models suggested the same two-parameter formula, to which we added a third parameter to successfully fit the data and thus achieved a rapid, precise way to measure S/V from the increase in T1 due to confinement in pores. |
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Keywords: | Spin– rotation T1 Collision frequency Surface/volume ratio Perfluorocarbon |
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