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Question
Derive a mathematical expression showing the relationship between the extent of adsorption of a gas on a surface with pressure (within lower and higher ranges). Calculate the extent of adsorption at one atmosphere.
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Solution
The empirical relationship between the extent of adsorption `(x/m)` and the pressure (P) of a gas at constant temperature is given by the Freundlich adsorption isotherm:
`x/m = kP^(1//n)` where n > 1
Where:
x = Mass of gas adsorbed
m = Mass of adsorbent
P = Equilibrium pressure of the gas
k and n = Empirical constants that depend on the nature of gas and adsorbent.
Behaviour at pressure extremes:
At low pressure:
When P is small, `1/n` ≈ 1
`x/m` = kP
This implies adsorption is directly proportional to pressure.
At high pressure:
As pressure becomes very high, P1/n ≈ constant, so:
`x/m` = constant
This means the extent of adsorption becomes independent of pressure due to surface saturation.
Final general expression:
`x/m = kP^(1//n)`
Numerical Example:
Let’s assume, k = 0.5, n = 2, P = 1 atm
Using `x/m = kP^(1//n)`
= 0.5 × (1)1/2
= 0.5
The extent of adsorption at 1 atm is `x/m` = 0.5.
