Adsorption Isotherms: (Item No.: P3040801)
Adsorption Isotherms: (Item No.: P3040801)
Adsorption Isotherms: (Item No.: P3040801)
Sheet
Printed: 30.03.2017 16:00:52 | P3040801
Subtopic:
Area of Expertise: Education Level: Topic: Experiment:
Thermochemistry,
Chemistry University Physical Chemistry Adsorption isotherms
Calorimetry
Keywords:
adsorbent and adsorbate, Henry, Freundlich and Langmuir adsorption isotherms, volumetry
Overview
Short description
Principle
In general, the term adsorption is used to describe the attachment of gases or dissolved substances to the surface of a solid or
liquid. At constant temperature, the quantity of adsorbed substances is a function of the type of system investigated and the
partial pressure and / or concentration of the substance concerned. This correlation is described by a number of adsorption
isotherms. Their validity is to be investigated experimentally.
Safety instructions
Citric acid
H319: Causes serious eye irritation
P305+351+338: IF IN EYES: Rinse cautiously with water for several minutes. Remove contact lenses if present and easy to do
continue rinsing.
Equipment
Task
Determine the residual equilibrium concentrations of citric acid after stirring solutions of differing initial concentrations with a
constant mass of activated carbon. Use the measurement results to determine which of the adsorption isotherms is valid for the
given system.
Set up the experiment as shown in Fig. 1. Prepare 1000 ml of 1.0 molar citric acid solution by dissolving 210.16 g of citric acid in
distilled water and topping the volumetric flask off to the calibration mark. Pipette the volumes of this stock solution (Vst) that
are listed in Table 1 into separate clean 250 ml volumetric flasks and top the flasks off to the calibration mark.
Pour 100 ml each of the six concentration series solutions into separate 250 ml Erlenmeyer flasks containing exactly 3.00 g of
activated carbon. Slip a magnetic stirrer bar into each flask. Seal the flasks, then stir the solutions in them vigorously for
approximately 30 minutes and filter them. Titrate the sample volumes V1 of the respective filtrates, as given in Table 1, with
1.0 molar sodium hydroxide solution using phenolphthalein as indicator. Titrate 10 ml of the 1.0 molar citric acid stock solution
V0 similarly to check the initial concentration.
Vst / ml V1 / ml
250.0 10
187.5 10
125.0 25
62.5 25
25.0 50
12.5 50
Table 1:
Volumes of stock solution for the preparation of the concentration series Vst and the sample volumes after filtration V1 for
the determination of the equilibrium concentration of citric acid.
Fig. 2: Investigation of the adsorption isotherm for the citric acid/active carbon system
Type and strength of the interactions allow a differentiation to be made between physicosorption (weak van der Waals forces,
very low adsorption enthalpies, a number of multilayers of the adsorbed substance) and chemisorption (chemical bonds,
substantial adsorption enthalpies, monolayers of the adsorbed substance).
Adsorption and desorption represent an equilibrium, the position of which is temperature-dependent. Adsorption is accompanied
by a decrease in surface tension and the liberation of heat of adsorption so that, acc. to Le Chateliers principle for exothermic
processes, adsorption must decrease with increasing temperature.
The quantity adsorbed is further dependent on the concentration of the substance in the contacting phase, and on the size of
the adsorbing surface. As the value of the latter is very difficult to determine, however, the quantity of the substance adsorbed
n.,ads is related to the mass of the adsorbent mA which is proportional to the size of the adsorbing surface:
(1)
Where
Adsorption molaltiy
The type and degree of adsorption are functions of the chemical nature of the adsorbent and the adsorbate as well as of the
adsorbate temperature and concentration (for dissolved substances) or partial pressure (for gases). The correlation between the
adsorption molality and the free equilibrium concentration of . at constant temperature is described by a number of adsorption
isotherms.
(2)
where
Equilibrium concentration of .
System-dependent constants
Fig. 3: Confirmation of the validity of the adsorption isotherm for the citric acid/active carbon system
(2.1)
allows simple graphic evaluation and thus the determination of the constants and (Fig. 3).
With increasing coverage of the surface, strives towards a limiting value max, i.e. monolayer formation. The quotient of the
real () and the maximum (max) adsorption molality is defined as the degree of coverage .
(3)
Taking this into consideration, the adsorption isotherm can be derived by examining the kinetics of adsorption and desorption.
The adsorption velocity is proportional to the product of the concentrations of the reaction partners, i.e. of the molecules of the
adsorbate and the free positions on the surface of the adsorbent. When represents the degree of coverage, then 1 is the
amount of free adsorbent surface.
(4)
where
For the case of an established adsorption (-dc./dt = 0), Langmuirs adsorption isotherm follows (Fig. 2):
(5)
where
= constants
The correlation between adsorption molality and equilibrium concentration can be linearized by rearranging:
(5.1)
In the region of the validity of the isotherm (5), the graphic plot of 1/ as a function of the reciprocal equilibrium concentration
1/c.,eq gives a straight line with a slope of 1/max K and the ordinate segment 1/max.
With very low equilibrium concentrations ( K c.,eq < 1) the isotherm (5) simplifies to
(5.2)
which is Henry-Daltons law. Thus the adsorption molality is linearly correlated with c.,eq.
In contrast, at very high equilibrium concentrations (K c.,eq > 1), the adsorption molality tends toward a concentration
independent limiting value max:
(5.3)
To check which adsorption isotherms are valid in the investigated case, determine which expressions of adsorption molality (, 1/
, lg ) correspond to relationships (5.2), (5.1) and (2.1) as functions of the corresponding equilibrium concentrations (c.,eq,
1/c.,eq, lg c.,eq).
The initial (c.,0) and equilibrium concentration (c.,eq) which are required for the evaluation can be calculated from the volume of
the volumetric flask VK = 250 ml and the volumes of NaOH of known concentration cNaOH required to neutralise the sample
volumes VNaOH,0 and VNaOH,1 of citric acid solution, taking the tribasicity of the absorbed material (citric acid) into account by
applying the following relationships:
(6.1)
(6.2)
The adsorption molality can be determined from the following correlation, which is derived from equation (1)
(7)
where
The linear correlation between the logarithms of the equilibrium concentration c.,eq and the adsorption molatity demonstrated
in Fig. 3 confirms the exclusive validity of Freundlichs adsorption isotherm in the investigated concentration range. The constant
= 0.172, which corresponds to the slope of the regression lines, lies in the range of values expected for granulated activated
carbon (0.1 < < 1.0).