Issue 11, 2023

Insights into the 3D permeable pore structure within novel monodisperse mesoporous silica nanoparticles by cryogenic electron tomography

Abstract

Sintered agglomerate of synthetic mesoporous silica nanoparticles (MSNs) is an architected geomaterial that provides confinement-mediated flow and transport properties of fluids needed for environmental research such as geological subsurface energy storage or carbon capture. The design of those properties can be guided by numerical simulations but is hindered by the lack of method to characterize the permeable pores within MSNs due to pore size. This work uses the advances of an Individual Particle cryogenic transmission Electron Tomography (IPET) technique to obtain detailed 3D morphology of monodispersed MSNs with diameters below 50 nm. The 3D reconstructed density-maps show the diameters of those MSNs vary from 35–46 nm, containing connected intraparticle pores in diameter of 2–20 nm with a mean of 9.2 ± 3 nm, which is comparable to the mean interparticle pore diameters in sintered agglomerate. The characterization of the pore shape and dimensions provides key information for estimating the flow and transport properties of fluids within the sintered agglomerate of those MSNs and for modeling the atomic MSN structures needed for pore-fluid simulations.

Graphical abstract: Insights into the 3D permeable pore structure within novel monodisperse mesoporous silica nanoparticles by cryogenic electron tomography

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
06 Mar 2023
Accepted
14 Apr 2023
First published
18 Apr 2023
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Nanoscale Adv., 2023,5, 2879-2886

Insights into the 3D permeable pore structure within novel monodisperse mesoporous silica nanoparticles by cryogenic electron tomography

Y. Xia, J. Liu, R. Kancharla, J. Li, S. M. Hatamlee, G. Ren, V. Semeykina, A. Hamed and J. J. Kane, Nanoscale Adv., 2023, 5, 2879 DOI: 10.1039/D3NA00145H

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