In chemistry, absorption is a process by which a substance incorporated in one state is transferred into another substance of a different state (e.g., gases being absorbed by a liquid or liquids being absorbed by a solid). As an industrial process, the most commonly encountered use of absorption is for the separation and/or purification of a gas mixture by the absorption of part of the mixture in a solvent.
Another chemistry process is adsorption which is the physical adherence or bonding of substances on the surface of another substance and it is not to be confused with absorption. In essence, absorption involves substances in one state being incorporated into the bulk volume of another substance in a different state, whereas adsorption involves substances being adhered to the surface of another substance.
Absorption may be either a physical or a chemical process:[1]
Physical absorption of a gas or part of a gas mixture in a liquid solvent involves the mass transfer that occurs at the interface between the gas and the liquid and the rate at which the gas diffuses into the liquid. Physical absorption of gases in a liquid solvent depends on the following parameters: solubility of the gases and the pressure and temperature conditions.
Chemical absorption or reactive absorption involves a chemical reaction between the substance being absorbed and the absorbing medium. In some cases, it occurs in combination with physical absorption. Chemical absorption depends upon the stoichiometry of the reaction and the concentration of the reactants.
Either type of absorption may be reversible or irreversible. The physical absorption of small amounts of oxygen in water can be reversed by heating the water. The reactive absorption of acid gases by an aqueous solution of ethanolamine can be reversed by distillation of the ethanolamine solution. However, the reactive absorption of hydrogen sulfide by zinc oxide cannot be reversed. The reactive absorption of carbon dioxide by an aqueous solution of sodium hydroxide (NaOH) is also irreversible and there not as economically acceptable as the reversible reactive absorption of carbon dioxide by ethanolamine solutions.