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Adsorption 6/6 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adsorption reference science, encyclopedia 2026-05-05T10:45:47.677105+00:00 kb-cron

== Adsorption spillover == In the case catalytic or adsorbent systems where a metal species is dispersed upon a support (or carrier) material (often quasi-inert oxides, such as alumina or silica), it is possible for an adsorptive species to indirectly adsorb to the support surface under conditions where such adsorption is thermodynamically unfavorable. The presence of the metal serves as a lower-energy pathway for gaseous species to first adsorb to the metal and then diffuse on the support surface. This is possible because the adsorbed species attains a lower energy state once it has adsorbed to the metal, thus lowering the activation barrier between the gas phase species and the support-adsorbed species. Hydrogen spillover is the most common example of an adsorptive spillover. In the case of hydrogen, adsorption is most often accompanied with dissociation of molecular hydrogen (H2) to atomic hydrogen (H), followed by spillover of the hydrogen atoms present. The spillover effect has been used to explain many observations in heterogeneous catalysis and adsorption.

== Polymer adsorption ==

Adsorption of molecules onto polymer surfaces is central to a number of applications, including development of non-stick coatings and in various biomedical devices. Polymers may also be adsorbed to surfaces through polyelectrolyte adsorption.

== In viruses == Adsorption is the beginning of viral entry, which is the earliest stage of infection in the viral life cycle. The next steps are penetration, uncoating, synthesis (transcription if needed, and translation), and release. The virus replication cycle, in this respect, is similar for all types of viruses. Factors such as transcription may or may not be needed if the virus is able to integrate its genomic information in the cell's nucleus, or if the virus can replicate itself directly within the cell's cytoplasm.

== In popular culture == The game of Tetris is a puzzle game in which blocks of 4 are adsorbed onto a surface during game play. Scientists have used Tetris blocks "as a proxy for molecules with a complex shape" and their "adsorption on a flat surface" for studying the thermodynamics of nanoparticles.

== See also == Adatom Cryo-adsorption Dual-polarization interferometry Fluidized bed concentrator Hydrogen-bonded organic framework Kelvin probe force microscope Micromeritics Molecular sieve Polanyi adsorption Pressure swing adsorption Random sequential adsorption Segregation (materials science)

== References ==

== Further reading ==

== External links ==