Permeation 

Permeation, in physics and engineering, is the penetration of a permeate (such as a liquid, gas, or vapor) through a solid, and is related to a material's intrinsic permeability. Permeability is tested by permeation measurement, for example by a minipermeameter.

Contents

Description

The permeate always migrates to the lower concentration in three steps:

  1. Sorption (at the interface): Gases, vapour or dissolved chemicals or suspended substances are adsorbed at the surface of the solid.
  2. Diffusion (through the solid): The permeate penetrates the solid material through pores or molecular gaps.
  3. Desorption: The adsorbate leaves the solid as a gas.

Related terms

History

Abbé Jean-Antoine Nollet (physicist, 1700–1770)

Nollet tried to seal wine containers with a pig's bladder and stored them under water. After a while the bladder bulged outwards. He noticed the high pressure that discharged after he pierced the bladder. Curious, he did the experiment the other way round: he filled the container with water and stored it in wine. The result was a bulging inwards of the bladder. His notes about this experiment are the first scientific mention of permeation (later it would be called semipermeability).

Thomas Graham (chemist, 1805–1869)

Graham experimentally proved the dependency of gas diffusion on molecular weight, which is now known as Graham's law.

Richard Barrer (1910–1996)

Barrer developed the modern "Barrer" measurement technique, and first used scientific methods for measuring permeation rates.

Permeation in everyday life

Permeation measurement

Permeation measurement with sweep gas
Testing cell for pipes

The permeation of films and membranes can be measured with any gas or liquid. The method uses a central module which is separated by the test film: the testing gas is fed on the one side of the cell and the permeated gas is carried to the detector by a sweep gas. The diagram on the right shows a testing cell for films, normally made from metals like stainless steel. The photo shows a testing cell for pipes made from glass, similar to a Liebig condenser. The testing medium (liquid or gas) is situated in the inner white pipe and the permeate is collected in the space between the pipe and the glass wall. It is transported by a sweep gas (connected to the upper and lower joint) to an analysing device.

See also

Further reading