“…Up to now, the focus in the investigations of adsorption-induced deformation has been mainly on materials with planar or convex pores, for example, templated silica or porous glasses. Simple geometrical representations of pores (planar, cylindrical, or spherical) were sufficient in order to reproduce not only adsorption isotherms but also strain isotherms. ,,, However, there is a class of materials, whose pores substantially differ from “simple” ones, namely, their porous body consists of convex, predominantly nonporous parts. Important examples are opals, the pore structure of which are formed by nonconvex pores. , Some templated carbons also have nonconvex pores and present a nice reference material for studying adsorption-induced deformation, such as inverse replica of SBA-15 silica, CMK-3 templated carbon, which consists of hexagonally ordered rods held together by thin interconnections .…”