Interaction of freshly precipitated silica gel with aqueous solutions was studied at laboratory batch experiments under ambient and near neutral pH-conditions. The overall process showed excellent reversibility: gel growth could be considered as an opposite process to dissolution and a linear rate law could be applied to experimental data. Depending on the used rate law form, the resulting rate constants were sensitive to errors in parameters/variables such as gel surface area, equilibrium constants, Si-fluxes, and reaction quotients. The application of an Integrated Exponential Model appeared to be the best approach for dissolution data evaluation. It yielded the rate constants k dissol * (4.50 ± 0.68) 9 10 -12 and k growth * (2.58 ± 0.39) 9 10 -9 mol m -2 s -1 for zero ionic strength. In contrast, a Differential Model gave best results for growth data modeling. It yielded the rate constants k dissol * (1.14 ± 0.44) 9 10 -11 and k growth * (6.08 ± 2.37) 9 10 -9 mol m -2 s -1 for higher ionic strength (I * 0.04 to 0.11 mol L -1 ). The found silica gel solubility at zero ionic strength was somewhat lower than the generally accepted value. Based on the 298 K ðI¼0Þ SS ¼ 10 À2:754AE0:017 and 298 K ðI¼0Þ DBP ¼ 10 À2:728AE0:003 ; standard Gibbs free energy of silica gel formation was calculated as DG 0 f ð298 KÞ$ À 850,463 AE 98 J mol À1 and -850,318 ± 20 J mol -1 , respectively. Activation energies for silica gel dissolution and growth were determined as E dissol A $62:0 AE 3:2 kJ mol À1 and E growth A $48:8 AE 4:4 kJ mol À1 ; respectively. An universal value for growth of any silica polymorph, E growth A $37:4 AE 9:4 kJ mol À1 ; is not consistent with the value for silica gel growth, which questions the hypothesis about one unique activated complex controlling the silica polymorph growth.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.