Adsorption of water on M41s systems has been studied by means of
microcalorimetry and IR spectroscopy.
After thermal treatment at only 423 K, the samples show two types of
surface patches, one hydrophobic
(characterized by isolated silanols not interacting with water) and the
other highly hydrophilic (showing
the highest heat of reversible adsorption observed so far for the
H2O/SiO2 system). Thermal treatment
at
1023 K causes an extensive dehydration, partially recovered by
dissociative adsorption. Both the propensity
for silanol condensation (and the opposite reaction of hydrolysis of
siloxane bridges) and the very high heat
of reversible adsorption are related to the structural properties of
M41s.
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