2015 AIChE Annual Meeting Proceedings
(46e) Superadaptability of Water Molecules to Hydrophobic Nanoenvironments
Author
Superadaptability of Water Molecules to Hydrophobic Nanoenvironments
Katsumi Kaneko
Center for Energy and Environmental Science, Shinshu University, Nagano, 380-8553, Japan
The interaction of water with solid surfaces is one of importance research issues from fundamental science and technology, although it has been studied for a long time. When we drop a water droplet on the compressed disk plate of hydrophobic carbons having nanoscale pores, the water droplet forms a stable hemisphere. This indicates that the porous carbon-packed surface is rather hydrophobic. It is well-known that water vapor begins to be adsorbed suddenly on nanoporous carbons of fewer amounts of surface oxygen groups and hydrophobic zeolites such as AlPO4-5. The behavior can be phenomenologically described by the transformation of hydrophobic surface to hydrophilic surface1; we need to understand that water molecules can adapt to chemically unfavorable nanoenvironments through varying the intermolecular structure biomimically[1-3]. However, this quasi transformation does not occur on carbon aerogels having large mesopores[4-6]. The dependence of this quasi transformation on the pore size may be studied. Also we need to understand the contribution of edge carbons to water adsorption[7].
References
[1] Miyawaki, J., Kanda, T., Kaneko, K. 2001 Langmuir, 17 (2001) 664.
[2] Ohba, T., Kanoh, H., Kaneko, K. 2004 J. Am. Chem. Soc. 126, 1560.
[3] Kaneko,K. 2015, Nature Chem. 7, 194.
[4] Hanzawa, Y., Kaneko, K. 1997 Langmuir13 (1997) 5802.
[5] Thommes, M., Morell, J., Cychosz, K.A., Fröba, M., 2013 Langmuir29, 14893.
[6] Zoraida Pina-Salazar, E., Kaneko, K. Colloid Interface Sci. Comm. To be submitted.
[7] Asai, M., Ohba, T., Iwanaga, T., Kanoh, H., Endo, M., Campos-Delgado, J., Terrones, M., Nakai, K.,Kaneko, K. 2011 J. Am. Chem. Soc. 133,14880.