1947
DOI: 10.1021/ja01202a016
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Heats of Adsorption on Carbon Black. II

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Cited by 42 publications
(30 citation statements)
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“…per carbon atom for perfluoroethylene. These values are in approximate agreement with values found by Beebe et al (1,2) for the adsorption of a number of hydrocarbons by carbon surfaces. In the discussion which follows, it will be shown that the mode of adsorption is the same for the two gases and that the differences in the heat of adsorption may be accounted for solely in terms of the difference in molecular weight between the two compounds.…”
Section: Sg-ss = ( H G -H S ) / P supporting
confidence: 92%
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“…per carbon atom for perfluoroethylene. These values are in approximate agreement with values found by Beebe et al (1,2) for the adsorption of a number of hydrocarbons by carbon surfaces. In the discussion which follows, it will be shown that the mode of adsorption is the same for the two gases and that the differences in the heat of adsorption may be accounted for solely in terms of the difference in molecular weight between the two compounds.…”
Section: Sg-ss = ( H G -H S ) / P supporting
confidence: 92%
“…The factors influencing the adsorption of hydrocarbons on carbon surfaces have been exhaustively studied by Beebe and his co-workers (1,2). Beebe et al (2) measured the heats of adsorption calorimetrically for the adsorption of a series of hydrocarbons on a non-porous carbon black.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…31,33 For example, adsorption of various alkanes on different carbon blacks displayed initial heats of adsorption approximately 3 times larger than their isosteric heat of condensation. 13 In our case, the initial heat of adsorption is at most 1.3 times the butane heat of condensation, as can be seen in Figure 5.…”
Section: Data Analysis and Discussionsupporting
confidence: 50%
“…Heats of adsorption of hydrocarbons have been shown to approach 80 kJ/mole at very low coverage (for pentane or 1-pentene at 0°C), decreasing with increasing coverage to about 40 kJ/mole at a coverage of one monolayer (compared with a heat of liquefaction of about 25 kJ/mole) [23]. Because of the continuum of adsorption energies it is not always clear whether some of the observed effects in rubber are due to a few strong chemisorptive bonds or to a larger number of weaker bonds.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%