Publication:
Classical and new insights into the methodology for characterizing adsorbents and metal catalysts by chemical adsorption

Consultable a partir de

Date

2023

Director

Publisher

Elsevier
Acceso abierto / Sarbide irekia
Artículo / Artikulua
Versión publicada / Argitaratu den bertsioa

Project identifier

AEI/Plan Estatal de Investigación Científica y Técnica y de Innovación 2017-2020/PID2020-112656RB-C21/ES/
Gobierno de Navarra//0011-3673-2021-000004

Abstract

The adsorption phenomenon has been used extensively to achieve and explain solid-state reactions, control contamination, and purify liquids and gases. This process implies the use of a porous medium or a material with specific adsorption centers where the interactions with the reagents occur. Determination of the properties of adsorbent or catalyst materials that do not contain specific adsorption sites by physical gas adsorption is a well-established procedure in most research and quality-control laboratories. However, characterizing the specific centers by selective adsorption—chemisorption—remains an open question for discussion and study. The specific centers involved are often acidic/basic and metallic; in most cases, reagents are adsorbed and desorbed in these centers, whose determination allows controlling the processes and comparing the materials. The techniques and procedures presented herein facilitate the evaluation and the qualitative and quantitative determination of the surface properties of the materials using chemisorption processes for metallic and acidic/basic sites. The aim of this work is to review these techniques and procedures, including the updates published by several researchers, who mostly strive to explain the results of bifunctional metallic and acid–base catalytic behavior.

Keywords

Chemical adsorption, Selective adsorption, Active sites, Metallic dispersion, Metallic surface area, Acid/base properties

Department

Ciencias / Zientziak / Institute for Advanced Materials and Mathematics - INAMAT2

Faculty/School

Degree

Doctorate program

Editor version

Funding entities

The author is grateful for financial support from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (AEI/MINECO) and Government of Navarra through projects PID2020-112656RB-C21 and 0011-3673-2021-000004. Open access funding provided by Universidad Pública de Navarra . AG also thanks Santander Bank for funding via the Research Intensification Program.

© 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND D license.

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