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Hydrogen Bonding of Water Confined in Mesoporous Silica MCM‐41 and SBA‐15 Studied by <sup>1</sup>H Solid‐State NMR
376
Citations
35
References
2004
Year
Materials ScienceMolecular SieveWater ConfinedEngineeringMolecular SievingNanoporous MaterialBound Water MoleculesSurface ScienceChemical ShiftsChemisorptionMesoporous Silica Mcm‐41Physical ChemistryAdsorptionChemistryHydrogenHydrogen BondingWater MoleculesNuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
The adsorption of water in two mesoporous silica materials with cylindrical pores of uniform diameter, MCM-41 and SBA-15, was studied by 1H MAS (MAS=magic angle spinning) and static solid-state NMR spectroscopy. All observed hydrogen atoms are either surface -SiOH groups or hydrogen-bonded water molecules. Unlike MCM-41, some strongly bound water molecules exist at the inner surfaces of SBA-15 that are assigned to surface defects. At higher filling levels, a further difference between MCM-41 and SBA-15 is observed. Water molecules in MCM-41 exhibit a bimodal line distribution of chemical shifts, with one peak at the position of inner-bulk water, and the second peak at the position of water molecules in fast exchange with surface -SiOH groups. In SBA-15, a single line is observed that shifts continuously as the pore filling is increased. This result is attributed to a different pore-filling mechanism for the two silica materials. In MCM-41, due to its small pore diameter (3.3 nm), pore filling by pore condensation (axial-pore-filling mode) occurs at a low relative pressure, corresponding roughly to a single adsorbed monolayer. For SBA-15, owing to its larger pore diameter (8 nm), a gradual increase in the thickness of the adsorbed layer (radial-pore-filling mode) prevails until pore condensation takes place at a higher level of pore filling.
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