Abstract:
In various areas of science, technology, environment protection, construction, it is very important to
study processes of porous materials interaction with different substances in different aggregation states. From
the point of view of ecology and environmental protection it is particularly actual to investigate processes
of porous materials interaction with water in liquid and gaseous phases. Since one mole of water contains $6.022140857\cdot10^{23}$ molecules of H$_{2}$O, macroscopic approaches considering the water vapor as continuum media
in the framework of classical aerodynamics are mainly used to describe properties, for example properties of
water vapor in the pore. In this paper we construct and use for simulation the macroscopic two-dimensional
diffusion model [Bitsadze, Kalinichenko, 1980] describing the behavior of water vapor inside the isolated pore.
Together with the macroscopic model it is proposed microscopic model of the behavior of water vapor inside
the isolated pores. This microscopic model is built within the molecular dynamics approach [Gould et al.,
2005]. In the microscopic model a description of each water molecule motion is based on Newton classical
mechanics considering interactions with other molecules and pore walls. Time evolution of “water vapor – pore”
system is explored. Depending on the external to the pore conditions the system evolves to various states of
equilibrium, characterized by different values of the macroscopic characteristics such as temperature, density,
pressure. Comparisons of results of molecular dynamic simulations with the results of calculations based on the
macroscopic diffusion model and experimental data allow to conclude that the combination of macroscopic and
microscopic approach could produce more adequate and more accurate description of processes of water vapor
interaction with porous materials.