Surface Chemistry – Introduction
Surface chemistry deals with the nature of surfaces and the changes occurring at the surfaces of solids.
Adsorption & Related Terms
- Adsorption: Higher concentration of molecules (gas or liquid) on the surface of a solid than in the bulk.
- Desorption: Removal of adsorbed substance from the surface.
- Sorption: When adsorption and absorption occur simultaneously.
- Positive adsorption: Concentration of adsorbate is higher on surface than in bulk.
- Negative adsorption: Concentration of adsorbate is lower on surface than in bulk.
Factors Affecting Adsorption of Gases on Solids
- Nature of gas: Easily liquefiable gases (CO2, NH3, Cl2) are adsorbed more.
- Nature of adsorbent
- Surface area: Greater surface area → greater adsorption.
- Pressure: Adsorption increases with pressure.
- Temperature: Adsorption decreases with increase in temperature.
Types of Adsorption
Physical Adsorption (Physisorption)
- Weak Van der Waals forces
- Reversible
- Low heat of adsorption
- Occurs at low temperature
Chemical Adsorption (Chemisorption)
- Chemical bond formation
- Irreversible
- High heat of adsorption
- Specific in nature
Adsorption Isotherms
Adsorption isotherm shows variation of x/m with pressure at constant temperature.
Freundlich Adsorption Isotherm
x/m = kP1/n
- k and n are constants
- Valid at low pressure
- log(x/m) = log k + (1/n) log P
- Slope = 1/n, Intercept = log k
Langmuir Adsorption Isotherm
x/m = aP / (1 + bP)
- Assumes monolayer adsorption
- Valid mainly for chemisorption
- At high pressure: x/m = a/b
- At low pressure: x/m ∝ P
Adsorption Isobars
Graph between x/m and temperature at constant pressure.
- Physisorption: adsorption decreases with temperature
- Chemisorption: adsorption first increases, then decreases
Catalysis
Catalysis is the phenomenon of altering the rate of reaction using a substance called a catalyst, without change in its mass or composition.
Types of Catalysis
- Homogeneous catalysis: Catalyst and reactants in same phase
- Heterogeneous catalysis: Catalyst and reactants in different phases
Positive & Negative Catalysis
- Positive catalysis: Increases reaction rate
- Negative catalysis: Decreases reaction rate (e.g. alcohol preventing oxidation of chloroform)
Enzyme Catalysis
- Enzymes are biochemical catalysts
- Highly specific in nature
- Examples:
- Glucose → Ethanol (zymase)
- Alcohol → Acetic acid (mycoderma aceti)
- Urea hydrolysis (urease)
Colloidal State
Classification Based on Particle Size
- True solution: Homogeneous
- Suspension: Heterogeneous, large particles
- Colloidal solution: Intermediate particle size
Based on Interaction with Medium
- Lyophilic colloids: Strong affinity for dispersion medium
- Lyophobic colloids: Little or no affinity
Preparation of Colloidal Solutions
Dispersion Methods
- Grinding
- Peptization
- Bredig’s arc method (metal sols)
Condensation Methods
- Exchange of solvent
- Excessive cooling
- Double decomposition
- Hydrolysis
- Oxidation
- Reduction
Purification of Colloids
- Dialysis
- Electrodialysis
- Ultrafiltration
- Ultracentrifugation
Properties of Colloids
Colligative Properties
- Osmotic pressure
- Elevation in boiling point
- Depression in freezing point
Optical Property (Tyndall Effect)
- Scattering of light by colloidal particles
Electrical Properties
- Colloidal particles carry charge
- Metal sols are generally negatively charged
Electrophoresis
- Movement of colloidal particles under electric field
Coagulation
- Precipitation of colloids by excess electrolyte
- Hardy–Schulze rule: Higher valency of ion → greater coagulating power
- Flocculation value: minimum electrolyte concentration causing coagulation
Protection of Colloids
- Stabilisation of lyophobic sols using lyophilic colloids
- Gold number: Minimum amount of protective colloid preventing coagulation
Emulsions
- Emulsion: Dispersion of one liquid in another immiscible liquid
- Oil in water: Milk
- Water in oil: Butter, cold cream
Emulsification
- Formation of emulsion using emulsifiers (soap, detergents)
Micelle Formation
- Aggregation of surfactant molecules above CMC
- Example: Sodium stearate
- Hydrophobic tail + hydrophilic head
- CMC ≈ 10−3 mol L−1
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Last modified: December 14, 2025
