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- 2009 Annual Meeting
- Separations Division
- Poster Session On Fundamentals and Applications of Adsorption and Ion Exchange
- (338a) Resolving the Inconsistency Between Classical Diffusion and Adsorption
The classical phenomenological model of diffusion in fluids is based on the concepts of the mean-free-path, L, and diffusion coefficient, D=(1/3)LV, where V is the characteristic velocity. Using the limit of small L in the flux term gives classical diffusion equation, i.e. Fick's Law. However, this reduces two independent parameters, L and V, to one parameter, D=(1/3)LV. This is equivalent to reducing two independent length scales, L and Vt, to only one (diffusion) length scale. Since the L - length scale determines density profiles near surfaces, the classical diffusion model ?loses? adsorption phenomena after applying the limit of small L, and classical solutions are in conflict with adsorption at surfaces.
Here, we show that relaxing the requirement of small L by using exact (finite-difference) functional for the flux term fixes the problem. Solution of the finite-difference diffusion equation is analyzed. This solution allows boundary conditions consistent with density profiles in fluids near surfaces.