Fluid Behavior In Nanoporous Silica

FRONTIERS IN CHEMISTRY(2016)

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Abstract
We investigate dynamics of water (H2O) and methanol (CH3OH and CH3OD) inside mesoporous silica materials with pore diameters of 4.0, 2.5, and 1.5 nm using low-field (LF) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) relaxometry. Experiments were conducted to test the effects of pore size, pore volume, type of fluid, fluid/solid ratio, and temperature on fluid dynamics. Longitudinal relaxation times (T-1) and transverse relaxation times (T-2) were obtained for the above systems. We observe an increasing deviation in confined fluid behavior compared to that of bulk fluid with decreasing fluid-to-solid ratio. Our results show that the surface area-to-volume ratio is a critical parameter compared to pore diameter in the relaxation dynamics of confined water. An increase in temperature for the range between 25 and 50 degrees C studied did not influence T(2)times of confined water significantly. However, when the temperature was increased, T(1)times of water confined in both silica-2.5 nm and silica-1.5 nm increased, while those of water in silica-4.0 nm did not change. Reductions in both T(1)and T(2)values as a function of fluid-to-solid ratio were independent of confined fluid species studied here. The parameter T-1/T(2)indicates that H2O interacts more strongly with the pore walls of silica-4.0 nm than CH3OH and CH3OD.
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Key words
low viscous fluids,confined state,relaxation,low-field NMR,subsurface
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