M. Thommes et al., CRITICAL DEPLETION OF A PURE FLUID IN CONTROLLED-PORE GLASS - EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS AND GRAND-CANONICAL ENSEMBLE MONTE-CARLO SIMULATION, Langmuir, 11(6), 1995, pp. 2137-2142
The effect of confined geometry on the critical-adsorption of a fluid
has been studied by measuring the physisorption of sulfur hexafluoride
(SF6) in a mesoporous controlled-pore glass (CPG, mean pore width 31
nm) along an isochoric path at the critical density rho(c) in the one-
phase region above the critical temperature of the fluid (15 K greater
than or equal to T - T-c greater than or equal to 0.3 K). Whereas the
surface excess amount of a fluid against a single planar adsorbing su
rface is expected to increase in a monotonic way along rho = rho(c) fo
r T --> T-c, it is found for the present system that the excess amount
of fluid in the pore reaches a maximum at T - T-c approximate to 1.5
K and then decreases sharply on further approaching T-c along the crit
ical isochore. Close to the critical point (T - T-c < 0.3 K) the mean
density of the pore fluid even tends to values lower than the density
of the bulk fluid. A grand canonical ensemble (GCE) Monte Carlo simula
tion of a fluid between two parallel walls (wall-to-wall distance 20 m
olecular diameters) in equilibrium with a bulk reservoir at the critic
al density suggests that this effect can be attributed to a depletion
in the core region of tbe pore as T approaches T-c.