Abstract

AbstractCombinations of gas sorption and mercury porosimetry experiments have been run in series on the same sample. This has been achieved by freezing entrapped mercury in place before a subsequent gas sorption experiment was carried out. Several different bidisperse materials with similarly shaped mercury intrusion curves and similar levels of mercury entrapment have been studied. The entrapment of mercury within certain pores in the porous medium can often lead to marked changes in the shape of the gas sorption hysteresis loop between the data obtained prior and subsequent to porosimetry. It was found that the degree of the change of shape of the sorption hysteresis loops differed markedly between different materials. The analysis of the gas sorption hysteresis loops using percolation theory has allowed information to be obtained on the pore length distribution, and/or the distribution of pore co‐ordination number and the spatial arrangement of pores within the sample, in addition to the pore connectivity and lattice size usually obtained. The interfaced experiments have also allowed the internal consistency of analysis methods based on percolation theory to be tested, semi‐empirical alternatives to the Washburn Equation for the analysis of raw mercury porosimetry data to be independently validated, and the mechanisms of mercury entrapment in various samples to be determined.

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