PhreeqcUsers Discussion Forum

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?

Login with username, password and session length
 

  • Forum Home
  • Login
  • Register

  • PhreeqcUsers Discussion Forum »
  • Beginners »
  • PHREEQC manual examples »
  • Langmuir Isotherm Constant Conversion (Example 19)
« previous next »
  • Print
Pages: [1]   Go Down

Author Topic: Langmuir Isotherm Constant Conversion (Example 19)  (Read 301 times)

garrettpd

  • Contributor
  • Posts: 2
Langmuir Isotherm Constant Conversion (Example 19)
« on: June 21, 2021, 10:55:18 PM »
Hello All,

I am researching novel adsorbents and I am attempting to model sorption of multiple metal species using experimentally-measured values and fitted Langmuir isotherm constants.

In example 19, the fitted langmuir constant (often denoted by K_L) is converted to a PHREEQC-friendly equilibrium constant (log_k), where log_k is equal to the base ten log of the molecular weight of the adsorbate divided by K_L. In this case, log_k = log(112.4e6/30.9) = 6.56.

In my mind, it seems a "better"-performing adsorbent would have a higher K_L, i.e., an adsorbent with a higher K_L should be expected adsorb more milligrams (or micrograms as in example 19) of adsorbate per gram of adsorbent. But in the case of example 19, an adsorbent with a higher K_L would perform "worse". E.g., given a K_L of 50, log(112.4e6/50) = 6.35, which is lower than the 6.56 used in the example, and Cd+2 would therefore have a lower propensity to sorb (see attachments). Am I missing something? Any advice would be greatly appreciated.

Thank you,
Garrett
Logged

dlparkhurst

  • Top Contributor
  • Posts: 2485
Re: Langmuir Isotherm Constant Conversion (Example 19)
« Reply #1 on: June 22, 2021, 12:24:30 AM »
I think there are other ways to write the Langmuir equation, but the way it is written in the PHREEQC manual, KLangmuir is inversely related to (LangmuirCd+2).

Code: [Select]
(LangmuirCd+2)       Langmuir total sites
-------------------  =  ----------------------
(Cd+2)                     KLangmuir + (Cd+2)

So, a bigger KLangmuir would produce a smaller (LangmuirCd+2) for the same total sites and (Cd+2). Because the PHREEQC log K is the inverse of KLangmuir, it follows that a larger PHREEQC log K would have the opposite effect; it would produce a larger LangmuirCd+2.



Logged

garrettpd

  • Contributor
  • Posts: 2
Re: Langmuir Isotherm Constant Conversion (Example 19)
« Reply #2 on: July 06, 2021, 08:23:59 PM »
That cleared things up and the results I'm getting are making more sense too. Thank you, dlparkhurst!
Logged

  • Print
Pages: [1]   Go Up
« previous next »
  • PhreeqcUsers Discussion Forum »
  • Beginners »
  • PHREEQC manual examples »
  • Langmuir Isotherm Constant Conversion (Example 19)
 

  • SMF 2.0.17 | SMF © 2019, Simple Machines | Terms and Policies
  • XHTML
  • RSS
  • WAP2