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BS ISO 15901-1:2016

Current

Current

The latest, up-to-date edition.

Evaluation of pore size distribution and porosity of solid materials by mercury porosimetry and gas adsorption Mercury porosimetry

Available format(s)

Hardcopy , PDF

Language(s)

English

Published date

30-04-2016

£198.00
Excluding VAT

Foreword
Introduction
1 Scope
2 Normative references
3 Terms and definitions
4 Symbols and abbreviated terms
5 Principles
6 Apparatus and material
7 Procedures for calibration and performance
8 Procedures
9 Evaluation
10 Reporting
Annex A (informative) - Mercury porosimetry analysis results
Annex B (informative) - Recommendations for the safe
        handling of mercury
Bibliography

Explains a method for the evaluation of the pore size distribution and the specific surface area of pores in solids by mercury porosimetry according to the method of Ritter and Drake.

Committee
LBI/37
DevelopmentNote
Supersedes 03/320628 DC (02/2006) Supersedes 13/30276423 DC. (05/2016)
DocumentType
Standard
Pages
30
PublisherName
British Standards Institution
Status
Current
Supersedes

This International Standard describes a method for the evaluation of the pore size distribution and the specific surface area of pores in solids by mercury porosimetry according to the method of Ritter and Drake [1] [2] . It is a comparative test, usually destructive due to mercury contamination, in which the volume of mercury penetrating a pore or void is determined as a function of an applied hydrostatic pressure, which can be related to a pore diameter. Practical considerations presently limit the maximum applied absolute pressure to about 400MPa (60000 psi) corresponding to a minimum equivalent pore diameter of approximately 4nm. The maximum diameter is limited for samples having a significant depth due to the difference in hydrostatic head of mercury from the top to the bottom of the sample. For the most purposes, this limit can be regarded as 400µm. The measurements cover inter-particle and intra-particle porosity. In general, without additional information from other methods it is difficult to distinguish between these porosities where they co-exist. The method is suitable for the study of most porous materials non-wettable by mercury. Samples that amalgamate with mercury, such as certain metals, e.g. gold, aluminium, copper, nickel and silver, can be unsuitable with this technique or can require a preliminary passivation. Under the applied pressure some materials are deformed, compacted or destroyed, whereby open pores may be collapsed and closed pores opened. In some cases it may be possible to apply sample compressibility corrections and useful comparative data may still be obtainable. For these reasons, the mercury porosimetry technique is considered to be comparative.

Standards Relationship
ISO 15901-1:2016 Identical

ISO 3165:1976 Sampling of chemical products for industrial use — Safety in sampling
ISO 8213:1986 Chemical products for industrial use — Sampling techniques — Solid chemical products in the form of particles varying from powders to coarse lumps
ISO 12154:2014 Determination of density by volumetric displacement — Skeleton density by gas pycnometry
ISO 14488:2007 Particulate materials — Sampling and sample splitting for the determination of particulate properties

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