Abstract

Changes in hydration properties of different compounds in a process of formation of a complex adsorbent comprising carbon and TiO2or Zn2SiO4on its surface were studied by1H NMR spectroscopy under conditions of a liquid phase freezing. Adsorbents were synthesized on the basis of a mesoporous silica gel, the surface of which was covered with a carbon layer formed in a process of a high temperature pyrolysis of acetylacetone. Titanium oxide and zinc silicate on the surface of a parent silica gel were formed by a pyrolysis of acetylacetonates of the corresponding metals. It has been revealed that the main types of surface-active sites for the adsorbed water molecules on the carbosil surface are the systems of condensed benzene nuclei of a carbon component of the surface and hydroxyl groups of silica surface. Zn2SiO4and TiO2have been formed in a process of pyrolysis of the corresponding metal acetylacetonates. Water bound with the oxide component of the carbosil surface exceeds 80% of the total amount of the adsorbed water. The carbon component of the surface is localized mainly in the narrowest pores. A minimum value in the free surface energy was recorded for the carbosil sample.

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