How to extract bubbles gas from gel(Super Absorbent Polymer)

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around extracting gases trapped in super absorbent polymer (SAP), specifically sodium polyacrylate. The main methods considered for gas extraction include using salt to liquefy the gel or employing a vacuum pump. While using salt could effectively turn the gel back to liquid, it poses a risk of contaminating the SAP. There is also a suggestion to pressurize the gel to facilitate gas dissolution and diffusion into unsaturated regions, although the original poster emphasizes that their primary goal is simply to extract the gas rather than saturate the gel. The conversation highlights the challenges of maintaining SAP integrity while effectively extracting the trapped gases.
kevin_tee
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I have been thinking to extract gases from SAP (the gel is super absorbent polymer(sodium polyacrylate)). The gases are trapped inside the gel in form of bubbles gas. I am thinking of using salt to turn it back to liquid or using vacuum pump to extract gas out. Using salt might be the best way but it contaminated the SAP. Do anybody have any suggestion? Thank very much.
 
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Have you tried the vacuum pump on the unsalted gel? what happened?
 
kevin_tee said:
I have been thinking to extract gases from SAP (the gel is super absorbent polymer(sodium polyacrylate)). The gases are trapped inside the gel in form of bubbles gas. I am thinking of using salt to turn it back to liquid or using vacuum pump to extract gas out. Using salt might be the best way but it contaminated the SAP. Do anybody have any suggestion? Thank very much.
How sure are you that the gel is saturated by the gas throughout? If it isn't, then perhaps you can pressurize the gel and allow enough time for the gas to dissolve and diffuse into unsatruated regions of the gel.
 
Thanks for answering, but I don't need to saturate the gel, I just need to extract the gas, so I think liquefy it would be the best way.
 
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