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Physisorbed and structurally bound (surface and internal) water in silica opals are distinguished and quantified by thermogravimetry. By controlled dehydroxylation with thermal annealing, we correlate these forms of water with the silica chemistry. In particular, we find that the silica capability to physically adsorb water from ambient moisture exhibits three regimes, associated with the distinct condensation behavior of bonded and unbonded surface silanols. Features in both opal IR absorbance and photonic band gap reproduce the physisorbed water regimes. This allows direct assessment of the water content and its evolution just by routine optical spectroscopy, being a useful tool for local and nondestructive analysis of colloidal silica. Besides, this provides a simple recipe for accurate tuning of the opal photonic band gap (about 10% in position and width) by just selecting the annealing temperature.
Optical Phenomena, Surface Properties, Temperature, Water, Adsorption, Silicon Dioxide
Optical Phenomena, Surface Properties, Temperature, Water, Adsorption, Silicon Dioxide
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