Adv Colloid Interface Sci
September 2016
Investigations of interfacial and temperature behaviors of nonpolar and polar adsorbates interacting with individual and complex fumed metal or metalloid oxides (FMO), initial and subjected to various treatments or chemical functionalization and compared to such porous adsorbents as silica gels, precipitated silica, mesoporous ordered silicas, filled polymeric composites, were analyzed. Complex nanooxides include core-shell nanoparticles, CSNP (50-200nm in size) with titania or alumina cores and silica or alumina shells in contrast to simple and smaller nanoparticles of individual FMO. CSNP could be destroyed under high-pressure cryogelation (HPCG) or mechanochemical activation (MCA).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Nanopart Res
January 2015
A new adsorbent consisting of fumed, mixed alumina, silica, and titania in various proportions (AST 50) was investigated. The studied material was prepared by chemical vapor deposition method. The diameter of AST 50 primary particles was equal to about 51 nm which denotes that it can be classified as a nanomaterial.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe influence of solution pH (in the range 3-9) on the adsorption of polyacrylic acid (PAA) on the mixed silica-alumina surface (SA-3: SiO 97 %-AlO 3 % and SA-96: SiO 4 %-AlO 96 %) was investigated. The following methods were applied in experiments: spectrophotometry, viscosimetry, potentiometric titration, and microelectrophoresis, which enable determination of adsorbed amount of the polymer, thickness of its adsorption layers, surface charge density, and zeta potential of solid particles in the presence and absence of PAA, respectively. The obtained results indicate that rise of solution pH causes the decrease of PAA adsorption and the increase of its adsorption layer thickness on surfaces of both solids.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Colloid Interface Sci
August 2013
Detailed analysis of the interfacial behavior of water and weakly polar or nonpolar organics adsorbed alone or co-adsorbed onto activated carbons (AC) at different temperatures is a complex problem important for practical applications of adsorbents. Interaction of water, 1-decanol, and n-decane with AC possessing highly developed porosity (pore volume Vp≈1.4-2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe interfacial and temperature behavior of n-decane bound to weakly hydrated nanosilica A-400 (initial, heated, or compacted) or silica gel Si-60 was studied using low-temperature (1)H NMR spectroscopy applied to static samples that allowed us to observe signals only of mobile decane and unfrozen water molecules. For deeper insight into the phenomena studied, interactions of n-decane, 1-decanol, and water with a set of nanosilicas and silica gels were analyzed using DSC and thermoporometry. Both NMR and DSC results demonstrated that during heating of frozen samples at a heating rate of 5 K/min a portion of decane or decanol remained frozen at temperature higher than the freezing point of bulk liquid (Tf).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Colloid Interface Sci
August 2010
Adsorption of low-molecular adsorbates (nonpolar hexane, nitrogen, weakly polar acetonitrile, and polar diethylamine, triethylamine, and water) onto individual (silica, alumina, titania), binary (silica/alumina (SA), silica/titania (ST)), and ternary (alumina/silica/titania, AST) fumed oxides was studied to analyse the effects of morphology and surface composition of the materials. Certain aspects of the interfacial phenomena dependent on the structural characteristics of oxides were analysed using calorimetry, (1)H NMR, and Raman spectroscopies, XRD, and ab initio quantum-chemical calculations. The specific surface area S(BET,X)-to-S(BET,N(2)) ratio (X is an organic adsorbate) changes from 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInterfacial interactions, chain dynamics, and glass and melting transitions were studied in well-defined core-shell nanoparticles with amorphous silica or crystalline alumina cores and noncrystallizable poly(vinyl pyrrolidone) (PVP) or crystallizable poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) shells. Varying particle composition caused regular changes in the shell thickness from 1 to 2 nm (monomolecular layer) up to 90 nm. Far- and mid-IR spectroscopy allowed us to register hydrogen bonding and, tentatively, Lewis/Brønsted (LB) interfacial interactions as well as changes in the dynamics and conformational state of the polymer chains as a function of the nanoshell thickness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Colloid Interface Sci
February 2009
Morphological, structural, adsorption, and catalytic properties of highly disperse titania prepared using sulfate and pyrogenic methods, and fumed titania-containing mixed oxides, were studied using XRD, TG/DTA, nitrogen adsorption, (1)H NMR, FTIR, microcalorimetry on immersion of oxides in water and decane, thermally stimulated depolarization current (TSDC) and catalytic photodecomposition of methylene blue (MB). Phase composition and aggregation characteristics of nanoparticles (pore size distribution) of sulfate and pyrogenically prepared titania are very different; temperature dependent structural properties are thus very different. Catalytic activity for the photodecomposition of MB is greatest (per gram of TiO(2) for the pure oxide materials) for non-treated ultrafine titania PC-500, which has the largest S(BET) value and smallest particle size of the materials studied.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA variety of fumed oxides such as silica, alumina, titania, silica/alumina (SA), silica/titania (ST), and alumina/silica/titania (AST) were characterized. These oxides have different specific surface areas and different primary particle composition in the bulk and at the surface. These materials were studied by FTIR, NMR, Auger electron spectroscopy, one-pass temperature-programmed desorption with mass spectrometry control (OP TPDMS), microcalorimetry, and nitrogen adsorption.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Colloid Interface Sci
August 2007
Interaction of poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) with fumed silica was investigated in the gas phase and aqueous media using adsorption, broadband dielectric relaxation spectroscopy (DRS), thermally stimulated depolarization current (TSDC), infrared spectroscopy, thermal analysis, and one-pass temperature-programmed desorption (OPTPD) mass-spectrometry (MS) methods. PVA monolayer formation leads to certain textural changes in the system (after suspension and drying) because of strong hydrogen bonding of the polymer molecules to silica nanoparticles preventing strong interaction between silica particles themselves. This strong interaction promotes associative desorption of water molecules at lower temperatures than in the case of silica alone.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStructural characterization of different silicas (ordered mesoporous silicas MCM-41, MCM-48, and SBA-15, amorphous silica gels Si-40, Si-60, and Si-100, and initial and wetted-dried fumed silica A-300) and bio-objects (fibrinogen solution, yeast cells, wheat seeds, and bone tissues) has been done using two versions of cryoporometry based on integral Gibbs-Thomson (IGT) equation for freezing point depression of pore liquids measured by 1H NMR spectroscopy (180-200 < T < 273 K) and thermally stimulated depolarization current (TSDC) method (90 < T < 273 K). The IGT equation was solved using a self-consisting regularization procedure including the maximum entropy principle applied to the distribution function of pore size (PSD). Comparison of the PSDs calculated by using the cryoporometry and nitrogen adsorption methods for the mentioned silicas demonstrates that IGT equation provides satisfactory fit which is better than that obtained with nonintegral Gibbs-Thomson (GT) equation (based on the GT equation) proposed by Aksnes and Kimtys.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPolymethylsiloxane (PMS) hydrogel (C(PMS)=10 wt%, soft paste-like hydrogel), diluted aqueous suspensions, and dried/wetted xerogel (powder) were studied in comparison with suspensions and dry powders of unmodified and silylated nanosilicas and silica gels using (1)H NMR, thermally stimulated depolarization current (TSDC), quasielastic light scattering (QELS), rheometry, and adsorption methods. Nanosized primary PMS particles, which are softer and less dense than silica ones because of the presence of CH(3) groups attached to each Si atom and residual silanols, form soft secondary particles (soft paste-like hydrogel) that can be completely decomposed to nanoparticles with sizes smaller than 10 nm on sonication of the aqueous suspensions. Despite the soft character of the secondary particles, the aqueous suspensions of PMS are characterized by a higher viscosity (at concentration C(PMS)=3-5 wt%) than the suspension of fumed silica at a higher concentration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Colloid Interface Sci
February 2007
Applications of thermally stimulated depolarisation current (TSDC) technique to a variety of systems with different dispersion phases such as disperse and porous metal oxides, polymers, liquid crystals, amorphous and crystalline solids, composites, solid solutions, biomacromolecules, cells, tissues, etc. in gaseous or liquid dispersion media are analysed. The effects of dipolar, direct current (dc) and space charge relaxations are linked to the temperature dependent mobility of molecules, their fragments, protons, anions, and electrons and depend on thermal treatment, temperature and field intensity of polarisation, heating rate on depolarisation or cooling rate on polarisation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Colloid Interface Sci
August 2006
Successive interaction of different pairs of water-soluble polymers (poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG), poly(vinyl pyrrolidone) (PVP), poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA)), proteins (bovine serum albumin (BSA), ovalbumin, gelatin, and ossein), and smaller organics such as lecithin (1-stearoyl-2-oleoyl phosphatidylcholine, SOPC) and Aethonium (1,2-ethylene-bis(N-dimethyl carbodecyl oxymethyl) ammonium dichloride) with nanosilicas A-300 (S(BET)=232 and 297 m(2) g(-1)) and A-50 (S(BET)=52 m(2)g(-1)) was studied using dynamic light scattering, adsorption, and infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy methods. Time-dependent rearrangement of particle size distributions (PSDs) depicts appearance of both smaller and larger aggregates for silica/PEG(I-first adsorbate)/BSA(II-second adsorbate) and silica/PVP(I)/BSA(II) (i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFColloids Surf B Biointerfaces
March 2006
Water bound in bone of rat tail vertebrae was investigated by 1H NMR spectroscopy at 210-300 K and by the thermally stimulated depolarization current (TSDC) method at 190-265 K. The 1H NMR spectra of water clusters were calculated by the GIAO method with the B3LYP/6-31G(d,p) basis set, and the solvent effects were analyzed by the HF/SM5.45/6-31G(d) method.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe nanoporous structure of collagen-glycosaminoglycan (CG) hydrogels was studied using 1H NMR spectroscopy and thermally stimulated depolarisation (TSD) current with layer-by-layer freezing-out of bulk and interfacial water. The depression of the freezing point of water is related to the size of the nanopore, to which it is confined. Changes in the Gibbs free energy of the unfrozen interfacial water are related to the amount of bound water in the hydrogel matrix and to the re-arrangement of the 3D network structure of the biopolymer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFumed silica Cab-O-Sil HS-5 grafted with 3-aminopropyldimethylsilyl (APDMS), butyldimethylsilyl (BDMS), octadecyldimethylsilyl (ODDMS), and trimethylsilyl (TMS) groups of different concentrations were studied using photon correlation spectroscopy, electrophoresis, potentiometric titration, and nitrogen adsorption methods. Calculations of both electrophoretic mobility and zeta potential were performed taking into consideration the topological structure of "porous" aggregates of primary particles of fumed silica using two different approaches. Changes in surface charge density and the textural, aggregative, and electrophoretic characteristics of modified silicas depend on the type of grafted OSC, its chain length, polarity, and surface concentration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Colloid Interface Sci
December 2005
The behaviour of water at mosaic hydrophilic/hydrophobic surfaces of different silicas and in biosystems (biomacromolecules, yeast cells, wheat seeds, bone and muscular tissues) was studied in different dispersion media over wide temperature range using 1H NMR spectroscopy with layer-by-layer freezing-out of bulk water (close to 273 K) and interfacial water (180 < T < 273 K), thermally stimulated depolarization current (TSDC) (90 < T < 270 K), infrared (IR) spectroscopy, and quantum chemical methods. Bulk water and water bound to hydrophilic/hydrophobic interfaces can be assigned to different structural types. There are (i) weakly associated interfacial water (1H NMR chemical shift delta(H) = 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeveral series of fumed silicas and mixed fumed oxides produced and treated under different conditions were studied in gaseous and liquid media using nitrogen and water adsorption-desorption, mass spectrometry, FTIR, NMR, thermally stimulated depolarization current (TSDC), photon correlation spectroscopy (PCS), zeta potential, potentiometric titration, and Auger electron spectroscopy methods. Aggregation of primary particles and adsorption capacity (Vp) decrease and hysteresis loops of nitrogen adsorption-desorption isotherms becomes shorter with decreasing specific surface area (S(BET)). However, the shape of nitrogen adsorption-desorption isotherms can be assigned to the same type independent of S(BET) value.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Colloid Interface Sci
March 2005
Nonfreezable water structured due to interaction with endocellular objects in yeast cells (endocellular water) or with partially hydrophobic fumed silica (interfacial water) was studied by means of (1)H NMR spectroscopy with layer-by-layer freezing-out of bulk water and quantum chemical methods applied to water clusters in the gas and liquid (chloroform and cyclohexene) phases and adsorbed on silylated silica. Variation in cell hydration as well as in amount of water adsorbed on modified fumed silica leads to changes in the ratio between contributions of two water states characterized by NMR chemical shifts at delta(H)=1.1-1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe interaction of fumed silica A-300 (S(BET) = 297 m2 g(-1)) with bovine serum albumin (prepared by different methods), ovalbumin, human hemoglobin, and gelatin as a function of pH, salinity, and concentrations of components in aqueous medium was studied by adsorption and photon correlation spectroscopy (PCS) methods. Comparison of equilibrium (incubation time t(i) approximately 1 h) adsorption of proteins on A-300, minute (t(i) approximately 1 min) flocculation rate, and the particle size distributions measured by the PCS method shows different rearrangement of particle swarms depending on pH, salinity, and concentration of proteins, especially at pH close to IEP of silica or proteins. The electrokinetic mobility of protein/silica swarms is greater than that of individual components at pH far from the IEP of proteins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Colloid Interface Sci
October 2000
Fumed oxides, such as silica, alumina, titania, and mixed X/silicas (X=Al(2)O(3) (AS), TiO(2) (TS), CVD-TiO(2), Al(2)O(3)/TiO(2) (AST)), pristine or covered by carbon deposits formed due to pyrolysis of cyclohexene, were studied using nitrogen adsorption-desorption, photon correlation spectroscopy particle sizing, and electrophoresis. A significant influence of the nature of surface-active sites and structural features of oxides (individual silica, mixed fumed, or prepared using chemical vapor deposition (CVD)) on the pyrolysis of cyclohexene is observed with respect to the pore size distributions due to differences between primary particles in aggregates and on their outer surfaces in the filling of channels by pyrocarbon, resulting also in a decrease in fractal dimension. Structural characteristics and dependences of the particle size distribution and electrokinetic potential of X/SiO(2) and C/X/SiO(2) on the pH of aqueous suspensions suggest that the carbon deposit covers mainly acidic sites at the X/SiO(2) interfaces and X phase patches possessing catalytic activity in pyrolysis, as the negative charge of particles is reduced by pyrocarbon grafting.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Colloid Interface Sci
December 1999
Fumed oxide alumina/silica/titania was studied in comparison with fumed alumina, silica, titania, alumina/silica, and titania/silica by means of XRD, (1)H NMR, IR, optical, dielectric relaxation, and photon correlation spectroscopies, electrophoresis, and quantum chemical methods. The explored Al(2)O(3)/SiO(2)/TiO(2) consists of amorphous alumina ( approximately 22 wt%), amorphous silica ( approximately 28 wt%), and crystalline titania ( approximately 50 wt%, with a blend of anatase (88%) and rutile (12%)) and has a wide assortment of Brønsted and Lewis acid sites, which provide a greater acidity than that of individual fumed alumina, silica, or titania and an acidity close to that of fumed alumina/silica or titania/silica. The changes in the Gibbs free energy (DeltaG) of interfacial water in an aqueous suspension of Al(2)O(3)/SiO(2)/TiO(2) are close to the DeltaG values of the dispersions of pure rutile but markedly lower than those of alumina, anatase, or rutile covered by alumina and silica.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Colloid Interface Sci
September 1998
Highly disperse germania has been synthesized on the surface of fumed silica by the chemical vapor deposition (CVD) technique. Aqueous suspensions both of unmodified fumed silica and of the obtained germania/silica (GS) samples have been studied by electrophoresis, photon correlation spectroscopy, nuclear magnetic resonance (1H NMR), and quantum chemical semiempirical AM1-SM1 methods. For suspensions of GS samples, electrophoretic mobility, isoelectric point (IEP), particle size distribution, average effective diameter (Def), and free energy changes (DeltaG) of interfacial water were found to depend nonlinearly on the concentration of germania (CGeO2).
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