Image:BET Multilayer Adsorption.jpg|thumb|Brunauer, Emmett and Teller's
model of multilayer adsorption is a random distribution of molecules on the material surface.
Adsorption is the adhesion of
molecules of gas, liquid, or dissolved solids to a
surface. This process creates a film of the
adsorbate (the molecules or atoms being accumulated) on the surface of the
adsorbent. It differs from
absorption, in which a
fluid permeates or is
dissolved by a liquid or solid. The term
sorption encompasses both processes, while
desorption is the reverse of adsorption.
Similar to
surface tension, adsorption is a consequence of
surface energy. In a
bulk material, all the bonding requirements (be they
ionic,
covalent, or
metallic) of the constituent
atoms of the material are filled by other atoms in the material. However, atoms on the surface of the adsorbent are not wholly surrounded by other adsorbent atoms and therefore can attract adsorbates. The exact nature of the bonding depends on the details of the species involved, but the adsorption process is generally classified as
physisorption (characteristic of weak
van der Waals forces) or
chemisorption (characteristic of covalent bonding).
Adsorption is present in many natural physical, biological, and chemical systems, and is widely used in industrial applications such as
activated charcoal, capturing and using waste heat to provide cold water for air conditioning and other process requirements (
adsorption chillers),
synthetic resins, increase storage capacity of carbide-derived carbons for
tunable nanoporous carbon, and
water purification. Adsorption,
ion exchange, and
chromatography are sorption processes in which certain adsorbates are selectively transferred from the fluid phase to the surface of insoluble, rigid particles suspended in a vessel or packed in a column.
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