Volumes and areas calculated from the idealized framework model
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Occupiable Volume | 71.75 | Å3 | (10.10 | %) | |||||
Accessible Volume | 59.72 | Å3 | (8.41 | %) | |||||
Occupiable Area | 122.85 | Å2 | (1026.11 | m2/g) | |||||
Accessible Area | 74.1 | Å2 | (618.93 | m2/g) | |||||
Specific Occupiable Area | 1729.66 | m2/cm3 | |||||||
Specific Accessible Area | 1043.3 | m2/cm3 | |||||||
Maximum diameter of a sphere: | |||||||||
that can be included | 6.27 | Å | |||||||
that can diffuse along | a: 2.53 | Å | b: 2.53 | Å | c: 5.96 | Å |
Explanations | |||||
Occupiable volume | That portion of the available volume within the cell that can be visited by the center of a (spherical) water molecule (radius = 1.4Å). The available volume is the unit cell volume remaining after the van der Waals atomic sphere volumes are subtracted. | ||||
Occupiable area | The area of that surface visited by the center of the water molecule. | ||||
Accessible volume | That portion of the occupiable volume that has continuity between all unit unit cells. Some pores/cavities have windows that are too small to allow the water molecule access, and so represent isolated occupiable regions. | ||||
Accessible area | The area of that surface visited by the center of the water molecule. | ||||
Specific occupiable area | Occupiable area per unit volume | ||||
Specific accessible area | Accessible area per unit volume |
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