Rigorous Models for Vapor Diffusion in Polymers with Immobilization and Chemical Potential Gradients.
Brandon L FoleySylvie AubryMaxwell MurialdoElizabeth A GlascoePublished in: The journal of physical chemistry. B (2024)
Two key phenomena─immobilization and concentration-dependent mixing free energies─simultaneously alter the sorption thermodynamics and diffusion of vapors in materials. This interrelation is leveraged to fit a unified model simultaneously capturing both sorption dynamics and the equilibrium isotherms. This transport model incorporates quasi-equilibrated immobilization reactions and considers Fick's law rigorously in terms of chemical potential gradients rather than concentration gradients. Five material case studies are discussed with varying characteristics, including fillers that provide sites for surface sorption, pores for capillary condensation, and apparent clustering or pooling at high vapor concentrations. Each case study illustrates that intrinsic diffusivity is constant, while the effective diffusivity changes predictably because of immobilization or changing free energies of mixing.