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February 2, 2025

Release

Introducing deep research

An agent that uses reasoning to synthesize large amounts of online information and complete multi-step research tasks for you. Available to Pro users today, Plus and Team next.

Today we’re launching deep research in ChatGPT, a new agentic capability that conducts multi-step research on the internet for complex tasks. It accomplishes in tens of minutes what would take a human many hours.

Deep research is OpenAI's next agent that can do work for you independently—you give it a prompt, and ChatGPT will find, analyze, and synthesize hundreds of online sources to create a comprehensive report at the level of a research analyst. Powered by a version of the upcoming OpenAI o3 model that’s optimized for web browsing and data analysis, it leverages reasoning to search, interpret, and analyze massive amounts of text, images, and PDFs on the internet, pivoting as needed in reaction to information it encounters.

The ability to synthesize knowledge is a prerequisite for creating new knowledge. For this reason, deep research marks a significant step toward our broader goal of developing AGI, which we have long envisioned as capable of producing novel scientific research.

Why we built deep research

Deep research is built for people who do intensive knowledge work in areas like finance, science, policy, and engineering and need thorough, precise, and reliable research. It can be equally useful for discerning shoppers looking for hyper-personalized recommendations on purchases that typically require careful research, like cars, appliances, and furniture. Every output is fully documented, with clear citations and a summary of its thinking, making it easy to reference and verify the information. It is particularly effective at finding niche, non-intuitive information that would require browsing numerous websites. Deep research frees up valuable time by allowing you to offload and expedite complex, time-intensive web research with just one query.

Deep research independently discovers, reasons about, and consolidates insights from across the web. To accomplish this, it was trained on real-world tasks requiring browser and Python tool use, using the same reinforcement learning methods behind OpenAI o1, our first reasoning model. While o1 demonstrates impressive capabilities in coding, math, and other technical domains, many real-world challenges demand extensive context and information gathering from diverse online sources. Deep research builds on these reasoning capabilities to bridge that gap, allowing it to take on the types of problems people face in work and everyday life.

How to use deep research

In ChatGPT, select ‘deep research’ in the message composer and enter your query. Tell ChatGPT what you need—whether it’s a competitive analysis on streaming platforms or a personalized report on the best commuter bike. You can attach files or spreadsheets to add context to your question. Once it starts running, a sidebar appears with a summary of the steps taken and sources used.

Deep research may take anywhere from 5 to 30 minutes to complete its work, taking the time needed to dive deep into the web. In the meantime, you can step away or work on other tasks—you’ll get a notification once the research is complete. The final output arrives as a report within the chat – in the next few weeks, we will also be adding embedded images, data visualizations, and other analytic outputs in these reports for additional clarity and context.

Compared to deep research, GPT‑4o is ideal for real-time, multimodal conversations. For multi-faceted, domain-specific inquiries where depth and detail are critical, deep research’s ability to conduct extensive exploration and cite each claim is the difference between a quick summary and a well-documented, verified answer that can be usable as a work product.

GPT-4o

Help me find iOS and android adoption rates, % who want to learn another language, and change in mobile penetration, over the past 10 years, for top 10 developed and top 10 developing countries by GDP. Lay this info out in a table and separate stats into columns, and include recommendations on markets to target for a new iOS translation app from ChatGPT, focusing on markets ChatGPT is currently active in.

Compiling comprehensive data on iOS and Android adoption rates, the percentage of populations interested in learning another language, and changes in mobile penetration over the past decade for the top 10 developed and developing countries by GDP is challenging due to data limitations. However, based on available information, we can provide insights and recommendations for targeting markets with a new iOS translation app powered by ChatGPT.

Top 10 Developed Countries by GDP:

  1. United States
  2. Japan
  3. Germany
  4. United Kingdom
  5. France
  6. Italy
  7. Canada
  8. South Korea
  9. Australia
  10. Spain

Top 10 Developing Countries by GDP:

  1. China
  2. India
  3. Brazil
  4. Russia
  5. Indonesia
  6. Mexico
  7. Turkey
  8. Saudi Arabia
  9. Argentina
  10. South Africa

Insights:

  • iOS and Android Adoption Rates: Globally, Android holds a dominant market share of approximately 70.93%, while iOS accounts for about 28.32% as of 2024. In the United States, iOS leads with a 58.81% market share. Other developed countries like Japan, Canada, Australia, and the United Kingdom also show a higher preference for iOS devices. In contrast, developing countries such as India and Brazil have a higher prevalence of Android devices.
  • Interest in Language Learning: While specific percentages of populations interested in learning another language are not readily available, the global popularity of language learning apps like Duolingo, which had approximately 14.3 million downloads in July 2024, indicates a significant interest. This interest is likely higher in countries with diverse linguistic landscapes or where English is not the primary language.
  • Mobile Penetration Over the Past Decade: Mobile phone ownership has seen substantial growth globally. In the United States, smartphone ownership increased from 35% in 2011 to 91% in 2024. Developing countries have also experienced significant growth in mobile penetration, contributing to increased access to digital services.

Recommendations:

Considering the available data and focusing on markets where ChatGPT is currently active, the following developed countries are promising targets for a new iOS translation app:

  • United States: High iOS market share and significant interest in language learning.
  • United Kingdom: Substantial iOS user base and a multicultural population with diverse language needs.
  • Canada: Notable iOS adoption and a bilingual population (English and French), increasing the demand for translation services.

Among developing countries, the following are noteworthy:

  • China: Despite Android's dominance, the large population and growing interest in English and other languages present a significant opportunity.
  • India: High Android usage, but a growing middle class with increasing iOS adoption and a strong interest in language learning, especially English.
  • Brazil: Predominantly Android users, but with a sizable market for language learning apps, particularly for English and Spanish.

Focusing on these markets aligns with ChatGPT's current availability and leverages existing mobile adoption trends and language learning interests.

Deep research

Help me find iOS and android adoption rates, % who want to learn another language, and change in mobile penetration, over the past 10 years, for top 10 developed and top 10 developing countries by GDP. Lay this info out in a table and separate stats into columns, and include recommendations on markets to target for a new iOS translation app from ChatGPT, focusing on markets ChatGPT is currently active in.

Top 10 Developed Economies (by GDP)Smartphone OS Share, Language-Learning Interest, and Mobile Penetration Growth

Country

iOS Market Share

Android Market Share

Interest in New Language

(% of population)

Mobile Penetration Change (2013→2023)

United States

(USA)

~58% iOS vs 42% Android

(see left)

High:

70% regret losing foreign-language ability (indicating strong desire to improve)

56%→82%

smartphone penetration (↑26 pp)

Japan

~69% iOS vs 31% Android

(see left)

High:

Over 50% want to learn English

~30%→79%

(approx.) (↑~50 pp)

Germany

~39% iOS vs 60% Android

(see left)

High:

86% of Europeans say everyone should speak ≥1 foreign language (strong pro-language attitude)

40%→82%

(↑42 pp)

United Kingdom

(UK)

~52% iOS vs 47% Android

(see left)

Moderate-High:

~73% have some interest (only 27% “no interest” in new languages)

62%→82%

(↑20 pp)

France

~35% iOS vs 64% Android

(see left)

High:

86% (EU average) favor multilingualism; English widely seen as important

42%→83%

(↑40 pp)

Italy

~30% iOS vs 69% Android

(see left)

High:

86% (EU avg.) favor language learning; 1 in 4 regret not learning another

41%→85%

(↑44 pp)

Canada

~60% iOS vs 40% Android

(see left)

Moderate:

Many bilingual (English/French); rising interest in third languages (no recent % data)

56%→~80%

(↑ ~24 pp) (est., similar to US)

South Korea

~24% iOS vs 76% Android

(see left)

Moderate:

Strong English education focus; ~40% of teens are learning English

73%→~95%

(↑ ~22 pp) – already very high by 2013 (near saturation now)

Australia

~55% iOS vs 45% Android

(see left)

Moderate:

~70% see learning languages as valuable (English dominant but interest in Asian languages growing)

65%→~85%

(↑ ~20 pp) (est., high smartphone use)

Spain

~20% iOS vs 79% Android

(see left)

High:

88% of Spaniards learned a foreign language in school (e.g. English); strong cultural interest

55%→~85%

(↑ ~30 pp) (est., nearing Western Europe peers)

Top 10 Developing/Emerging Economies (by GDP)(ChatGPT availability considered)

Country

iOS Market Share

Android Market Share

Interest in New Language

(notable stats)

Mobile Penetration Change (2013→2023)

China

^(ChatGPT restricted)

~24% iOS vs 75% Android

(see left)

Very High:

Hundreds of millions learning English (but ChatGPT not officially accessible)

47%→68%

(↑21 pp)

India

~4% iOS vs 95% Android

(see left)

High:

English compulsory in many schools; strong economic motivation (80% link English to higher income)

~5%→46%

(↑ ~41 pp) (huge jump in smartphone adoption)

Brazil

~18% iOS vs 82% Android

(see left)

High:

Great demand for English – only ~5% speak it, but most see it as key skill

26%→67%

(↑40 pp)

Russia

^(ChatGPT limited)

~30% iOS vs 69% Android

(see left)

Moderate:

English learning common (compulsory in school); interest exists but ChatGPT availability is uncertain

36%→74%

(↑38 pp)

Mexico

~24% iOS vs 76% Android

(see left)

High:

Strong desire to learn English for US job/migration; ~50% of students study English in school (est.)

37%→62%

(↑25 pp)

Indonesia

~12% iOS vs 88% Android

(see left)

High:

English seen as gateway skill; government programs to improve English proficiency

<30%→68%

(↑ ~40 pp)

Turkey

~15% iOS vs 85% Android (est.)

(see left)

High:

English highly valued (universal in education);

80%

link English to better jobs

30%→75%

(↑45 pp)

Saudi Arabia

~24% iOS vs 76% Android

(see left)

Moderate:

English widely taught; 92% smartphone ownership (many already bilingual in English/Arabic)

73%→~95%

(↑ ~22 pp) (early adopter; near saturation now)

South Africa

~16% iOS vs 83% Android

(see left)

High:

Multilingual society; English and Afrikaans taught alongside native languages – cultural impetus to learn others

40%→~60%

(↑ ~20 pp) (est., steady growth)

Argentina

~12% iOS vs 88% Android

(see left)

High:

Strong interest in English (Argentina leads Latin America in English proficiency)

31%→~70%

(↑ ~39 pp) (est., sharp rise with smartphone adoption)

Sources: Smartphone OS shares are from StatCounter/Statista data (2023–24). Language-interest metrics come from surveys by Preply, Eurobarometer, Babbel, etc. (e.g. UK 73% interest; US 70% regret lack of languages; Japan >50% want English; Pearson global survey). Mobile penetration is measured as smartphone ownership percentage – dramatic growth is noted in developing markets (e.g. Brazil +40 points) and high saturation in developed ones (e.g. UK ~82%) over the last decade.


Recommendations: Based on the above, prime targets for a new ChatGPT‑powered iOS translation app would be countries with large iOS user bases and strong language-learning demand, where ChatGPT is accessible. Notably, Japan, the U.S., UK, Canada, and Australia emerge as top choices. These markets pair high iOS adoption (50–60%+ share) with significant enthusiasm for language learning – for example, Japan’s iPhone dominance and widespread desire to learn English make it ideal. English-speaking countries like the US, UK, Canada, and Australia, despite being monolingual societies, show substantial interest in learning other languages (e.g. Spanish or French), and all have over 80% smartphone penetration and millions of iPhone users.

Among emerging economies, Mexico and Brazil stand out as secondary targets: although Android prevails, their sheer population sizes mean tens of millions of iPhone users exist, and interest in English is very high for career and education reasons. These Latin American markets (where ChatGPT is active) could yield strong adoption for an iOS-only app, especially given the motivation to learn English. Conversely, China and Russia are less feasible – China’s OS split skews Android and ChatGPT is not officially available there, and Russia faces access and regulatory uncertainties.

In summary, focus on iOS-heavy, pro-learning markets: Japan and Western countries (US, UK, Canada, Australia, plus high-income Europe like Germany and France to a lesser degree) should be the first-tier targets. They combine robust iOS usage with favorable language-learning attitudes. A second tier includes large-population developing markets (Mexico, Brazil, perhaps Saudi Arabia for its historically high iPhone uptake) where interest in English is strong – these can be approached once the app gains traction in the primary markets. Such a strategy ensures the app launches where it has the greatest alignment of platform (iOS) presence and user demand for translation/language tools, maximizing the likelihood of adoption and growth.

Deep research responds to the prompt in a highly detailed manner, providing side-by-side country-specific data for both top 10 developed and top 10 developing countries for easy reference and comparison. It uses that information to offer detailed market-entry recommendations that are informed and usable.

How it works

Deep research was trained using end-to-end reinforcement learning on hard browsing and reasoning tasks across a range of domains. Through that training, it learned to plan and execute a multi-step trajectory to find the data it needs, backtracking and reacting to real-time information where necessary. The model is also able to browse over user uploaded files, plot and iterate on graphs using the python tool, embed both generated graphs and images from websites in its responses, and cite specific sentences or passages from its sources. As a result of this training, it reaches new highs on a number of public evaluations focused on real-world problems.

Humanity's Last Exam

On Humanity’s Last Exam(opens in a new window), a recently released evaluation that tests AI across a broad range of subjects on expert-level questions, the model powering deep research scores a new high at 26.6% accuracy. This test consists of over 3,000 multiple choice and short answer questions across more than 100 subjects from linguistics to rocket science, classics to ecology. Compared to OpenAI o1, the largest gains appeared in chemistry, humanities and social sciences, and mathematics. The model powering deep research showcased a human-like approach by effectively seeking out specialized information when necessary.

ModelAccuracy (%)
GPT-4o3.3
Grok-23.8
Claude 3.5 Sonnet4.3
Gemini Thinking6.2
OpenAI o19.1
DeepSeek-R1*9.4
OpenAI o3-mini (medium)*10.5
OpenAI o3-mini (high)*13.0
OpenAI deep research**26.6
* Model is not multi-modal, evaluated on text-only subset.
**with browsing + python tools

GAIA

On GAIA(opens in a new window)1, a public benchmark that evaluates AI on real-world questions, the model powering deep research reaches a new state of the art (SOTA), topping the external leaderboard(opens in a new window). Encompassing questions across three levels of difficulty, successful completion of these tasks requires abilities including reasoning, multi-modal fluency, web browsing, and tool-use proficiency.

GAIA
Level 1Level 2Level 3Avg.
Previous SOTA(opens in a new window)67.9267.4442.3163.64
Deep Research (pass@1)74.2969.0647.667.36
Deep Research (cons@64)78.6673.2158.0372.57

GAIA task examples

In Nature journal's Scientific Reports conference proceedings from 2012, in the article that did not mention plasmons or plasmonics, what nano-compound is studied? Don't use the prefix nano in your answer if there is one.

[The remaining Chain-of-Thought messages and the final answer are hidden to protect the benchmark's ground truth answer.]

Clarifying the search

I’m piecing together the request for an article from 2012 in Scientific Reports that details a nano-compound, excluding any related to plasmonics. Likely, this involves filtering specific topics or compounds, like silver or graphene.

Piecing together details

I'm sub-searching "Scientific Reports 2012 nanoparticle," likely seeking nano-compounds. Interested in filtering out plasmon-related topics, possibly focusing on silver, graphene, or quantum dots.

[search action]

Navigating search filters

I’m digging into advanced search filters on nature.com and Scientific Reports for 2012, trying to pinpoint articles on amorphous carbon nanoparticles in food caramels.

Identifying conference proceedings

The search results reveal a conference proceeding titled "2D quasiperiodic plasmonic crystals" from 2012, likely found under the "Conference Proceedings" category in Scientific Reports.

[browse action]

Reflecting on potential issues

I'm considering the reasons behind a web page misconception, likely due to an outdated agent type or inadvertent blockage.

[browse action]

Considering dynamic options

I'm thinking about a nature site with dynamic content or a cached version. Alternatively, trying a search for specific phrases might help.

[search action]

Pinpointing key features

OK, I'm identifying four conference proceedings from 2012 in Sci Rep. Notably, some mention "plasmonic" and should be excluded.

[browse action]

Piecing together insights

I’m gathering info on accessing cached versions or snippet expansions for specific titles to ensure comprehensive analysis.

[search action]

Pulling together the details

I’m noting the progression from the 2012 European Materials Research Society Spring Meeting to the scientific report, focusing on conference proceedings. This approach helps establish context and relevance.

[search action]

Tracking journal clues

Trying to connect conference proceedings from late 2012 with "Scientific Reports" journal, focusing on plasmonic 2D quasiperiodic materials. This approach feels methodical and precise.

[search action]

Analyzing event details

Noting that the search results [8] include a page likely summarizing the European Materials Research Society 2012 Spring Meeting, including 25 symposia.

[browse action]

Piecing together research

I’m examining a likely collection page with 4 articles, considering plasmonic and metamaterial topics, and identifying key references from the European Materials Research Society 2012 Spring Meeting.

[browse action]

Pinpointing the focus

I’m focusing on the 2012 conference proceedings in "Scientific Reports" from E-MRS, likely involving topics like "2D quasiperiodic plasmonic crystals" and "Layered plasmonic cloaks to tailor the optical scattering at the nanoscale."

[browse action]

Evaluating library sources

Thinking about special issue E-MRS 2012 Sci rep invited paper Monticone and metamaterials lab at News Archives – 2012.

[browse action]

Assessing accessibility

I'm gathering info on potential site access issues, considering outdated status or blockages. Also, evaluating the Monticone site for a list reference.

[browse action]

Piecing together E-MRS 2012

I'm trying to link "Layered Plasmonic Cloaks" to E-MRS 2012. Considering other possible topics like graphene and catalysis.

[browse action]

Identifying relevant topics

I’m gathering info on topics like graphene, photovoltaics, and nanostructured compounds, while excluding plasmonic-related ones. This leads me to focus on nanotechnology aspects more broadly.

[browse action]

Adjusting my focus

I’m broadening the search parameters by entering specific site and scholar identifiers to pinpoint articles about 2D quasiperiodic plasmonic crystals in Nature Scientific Reports from 2012.

[search action]

Identifying non-plasmonic possibilities

I'm narrowing down the search to identify articles from the 2012 E-MRS special issue in Scientific Reports. This involves checking titles for non-plasmonic topics, like graphene or functional oxides. Progress is evident through focused searches and exclusion of plasmonic articles.

[search action]

Piecing together clues

I'm analyzing interactions in a graphene superlattice, likely from a Sci Rep article. Considering titles by authors like Padooru, Yakovlev, Chen, and Alu.

[search action]

Piecing together the puzzle

I’m gathering info on E-MRS 2012 Spring Meeting's Sci Rep proceedings, focusing on invited papers, without plasmonic phenomena. Types under review are graphene, catalysis, energy materials, nanomedicine, and sensors.

[search action]

Expert-Level Tasks

In an internal evaluation of expert-level tasks across a range of areas, deep research was rated by domain experts to have automated multiple hours of difficult, manual investigation. 

Pass Rate vs Max Tool Calls
Pass RateMax Tool Calls
The more the model browses and thinks about what its browsing, the better it does, which is why giving it time to think is important.
Expert-level task examples
Time saved on task: 4 hours

I am a researcher interested in bringing mixed-gas sorption capabilities to my lab. Please discuss the differences between pure- and mixed-gas sorption for glassy polymers, how the dual-mode sorption model can be used to predict mixed-gas sorption behavior in glassy polymers (include equations where applicable), and what challenges there are in accurately predicting pure- and mixed-gas sorption using the dual-mode sorption model. Only include open-source information as of October 1, 2024.

Pure vs. mixed-gas sorption in glassy polymers: In a glassy polymer (below TgT_g), a single gas typically exhibits a concave sorption isotherm: uptake rises sublinearly with pressure, unlike the linear Henry’s-law behavior above TgT_g. This is attributed to “dual-mode” sorption: some penetrant dissolves in the dense polymer matrix (obeying Henry’s law) while additional penetrant saturates specific microvoid “sites” (a Langmuir-type adsorption in the polymer’s nonequilibrium free volume). By contrast, when two or more gases are present, they compete for those limited Langmuir sorption sites. As a result, each component’s sorbed concentration in a mixture is generally lower than it would be at the same partial pressure alone. In particular the less soluble (lower-affinity) gas tends to be more strongly suppressed, often causing the mixed-gas solubility selectivity (ratio of concentrations) to exceed the ideal value predicted from pure-gas isotherms. For example, in CO₂/CH₄ mixtures both components sorb less than in their pure-gas cases (especially CH₄), so the CO₂/CH₄ sorption selectivity is higher under mixture conditions. In extreme cases, mixed-gas effects can even reverse performance trends observed with single gases. (We note that unlike competitive sorption, synergistic sorption – where one gas increases the sorption of another via polymer swelling – is usually minor in rigid high-free-volume polymers under moderate pressures.)

Dual-mode sorption model and mixed-gas prediction: The dual-mode sorption (DMS) model quantitatively captures glassy polymer sorption by superposing a Henry’s-law term and a Langmuir term. For a single gas, the sorbed concentration CC (e.g. in cm³(STP) gas per cm³ polymer) is written as:

C(p)=kDp  +  CHbp1+bp.C(p) = k_D\,p \;+\; \frac{C'_H\,b\,p}{\,1 + b\,p\,}\,.

Here kDk_D is the Henry’s law coefficient for dissolution, CHC'_H is the Langmuir capacity constant (proportional to the polymer’s unrelaxed free-volume or “hole” capacity), and bb is the Langmuir affinity constant. This empirical formula yields the characteristic concave isotherm of glassy polymers and reduces to simple Henry’s law at the glass-transition (since CH0C'_H \to 0 as TTgT \to T_g). The same three parameters (kD,CH,bk_D, C'_H, b) are obtained by fitting pure-gas sorption data and are then used to predict mixture sorption. For a binary mixture of gases A and B (with partial pressures pA,pBp_A, p_B), the DMS model assumes each gas obeys its own Henry’s term and that both compete for the same Langmuir sites. One convenient form is to write the total sorbed concentration as the sum of contributions from each gas:

Ctot=kD,ApA+kD,BpB  +  CH,AbApA  +  CH,BbBpB1+bApA+bBpB,C_{\text{tot}} = k_{D,A}p_A + k_{D,B}p_B \;+\; \frac{\,C'_{H,A}\,b_A\,p_A \;+\; C'_{H,B}\,b_B\,p_B\,}{\,1 + b_A p_A + b_B p_B\,}\,,

which implicitly means the concentration of component i in the mixture is Ci=kD,ipi+CH,ibipi1+jbjpjC_i = k_{D,i} p_i + \frac{C'_{H,i} b_i p_i}{\,1+\sum_j b_j p_j\,}. This reduces to the single-gas formula when the other component’s pressure is zero. In practice, partial pressure in these equations is often replaced by fugacity for accuracy at high pressures, though using fugacities or pressures gives nearly the same results if applied consistently. The DMS mixed-gas model predicts the competitive sorption effect observed experimentally – namely, each gas’s uptake is depressed relative to its pure-gas sorption isotherm.

Challenges and limitations: Although the dual-mode model is widely successful in correlating sorption data, it has notable limitations in predicting sorption behavior. First, the DMS model is empirical – its fitted parameters are not universal constants but can vary with polymer formation history, physical aging, and temperature/pressure range. This means a parameter set obtained under one set of conditions may lack predictive power outside its calibration range. For instance, sorption isotherms measured only over a limited pressure range can be fit well by DMS, but extrapolating beyond that (especially approaching plasticization pressures) may be unreliable. Indeed, multiple distinct combinations of kDk_D, CHC'_H, bb can sometimes fit the same pure-gas isotherm almost equally well – yet they yield markedly different mixed-gas predictions. This sensitivity undermines confidence in mixture forecasts, as one study showed that using different pure-gas fit sets led to only qualitative agreement with some mixed-CO₂/CH₄ data.

Furthermore, DMS inherently assumes a fixed population of Langmuir sites (microvoids) and ignores polymer relaxation or swelling induced by sorbate. In reality, penetrant-induced swelling (plasticization) can increase free volume and sorption capacity, especially for highly condensable gases at high activity – an effect the basic DMS model cannot capture. In binary sorption, this means any synergistic increase in sorption due to a second gas (or due to polymer dilation) is unaccounted for in the standard model. Conversely, the model also cannot describe sorption isotherm shapes that deviate from concave Langmuir-type behavior (e.g. sigmoidal isotherms caused by specific polymer-penetrant interactions or clustering). For example, glassy polymers absorbing polar molecules like alcohols can show sigmoidal sorption isotherms, which the simple dual-mode framework fails to represent. Finally, accurately measuring mixed-gas sorption itself is challenging, and discrepancies between idealized model assumptions (e.g. truly zero downstream pressure, no competitive diffusion limitations) and experimental realities can add to prediction error. Despite these challenges, the dual-mode sorption model – with appropriate care – remains a valuable first approximation for interpreting sorption in glassy polymers, and it highlights the key role of competitive site occupancy in mixed-gas environments. Researchers often turn to more elaborate models (e.g. non-equilibrium lattice fluid or thermodynamic theories) when the dual-mode model’s assumptions break down, but such models come at the cost of additional parameters or complexity. In summary, dual-mode sorption provides a useful baseline for pure- and mixed-gas sorption in glassy polymers, but one must be mindful of its empirical nature and the above limitations when predicting multicomponent sorption behavior in practice.

Sources: Dual-mode sorption model and mixed-gas extension; competitive sorption effects in mixtures; model equations and parameters; limitations of DMS model; parameter sensitivity and predictivity issues.

Understanding sorption models

I’m gathering info on pure and mixed-gas sorption in glassy polymers, focusing on the dual-mode sorption model and addressing challenges in modeling predictions.

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Assessing open access

OK, let me see. The result from MDPI on mixed-gas sorption in glassy polymers is probably open access.

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Examining sections
I’m pulling together insights from the Dual Mode Sorption Model and its extended analysis within the MDPI paper.

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Clarifying key properties

I’m examining the lab report to understand Henry's law constant, Langmuir affinity constant, and Langmuir capacity constant, which describe gas sorption.

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Piecing together

I'm working through the possibility that "Equation (3)" and "Equation (4)" might be images or formula displays and considering consulting the PDF or searching for earlier references to understand them better.

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Confirming title relevance

I’m verifying if the document from Freeman and Koros (1980) specifically matches the reference "Model for sorption of mixed gases in glassy polymers" by checking its abstract and title.

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Examining article connections

I noticed that the result from "pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov" is likely the same MDPI article, and I'm curious to see if it presents the text or a simplified version.

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Gathering info

I'm gathering information about pure and mixed gas sorption in glassy polymers. This is a critical step in understanding the material's behavior under different gas environments.

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Comparing gas sorption

I noticed that carbon dioxide's presence in a mixture affects methane sorption in polymer, reducing methane's sorption compared to a pure gas scenario.

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Linking concepts

I’m thinking through how the term "extended dual mode equation mixture" might relate to dual mode superconducting cable equations. This shows potential for connecting concepts across fields.

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Requesting review details

I'm noting the request to review "Theories of Sorption and Transport in Polymer Membrane."

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Checking PDF link

I’m curious about Result [2] and exploring the snippet, which involves extending a dual-mode sorption model to a binary mixture and expressing concentration of A in terms of partial pressures and constants.

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Predicting sorption behavior

The dual-mode model anticipates that adding a second gas reduces sorption at a constant partial pressure, unlike pure gas scenarios.

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Fetching a PDF

I'm gathering info on a nature.com PDF, possibly an older Yampol'ski article, but thinking about alternative sources like the University of Texas at Austin repository for a text snippet.

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Evaluating repository options

I’ve discovered that the UT repository result might not display correctly. Searching within it is uncertain. Alternatively, result [3] contains a snippet describing the dual mode mixture sorption model, explaining competitive effects and its adequacy in modeling experimental data.

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Refining the focus

I'm adjusting my approach to ensure the search targets the right context.

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Understanding sorption models

I’m detailing the dual-mode sorption model for pure gases: Henry dissolving and Langmuir microvoid filling. For mixed gases, competitive sorption and non-idealities are emphasized.

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Exploring hero.epa.gov

Thinking through hero.epa.gov's potential abstract or content.

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Refining the model

I'm gathering insights on pure and mixed gas sorption, considering factors like competition, plasticization, and parameter stability. Incorporating mixed-gas data for more accurate predictions.

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Addressing dual sorption model challenges

Parameter coupling and non-uniqueness impact predictions. Absence of polymer condition changes might lead to oversights.

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Quantifying deviation

I’m quantifying nonideal CO2-CH4 solubility in 6FDA-mPDA, showing mixed gas effects on solubility. Competitive sorption isn’t the sole cause of permeability selectivity decline.

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Incorporating references

I'm gathering citations, focusing on open-source materials like MDPI 2019 and Vopicka 2014, to support the discussion on differences and challenges in the dual-mode model for gas sorption in polymeric membranes.

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Proposing sections

I'm organizing sections on pure vs mixed-gas sorption, exploring the dual-mode sorption model, and detailing challenges like parameter uncertainty and mixed gas prediction.

Organizing content

I’m focusing on the dual-mode sorption model, detailing pure and mixed-gas sorption behaviors, and highlighting key differences and challenges with bullet points and structured sections for clarity.

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Choosing citations

OK, let me see. I’m leaning on [3], [20], [22], and [21] for their clear insights into dual-mode sorption and gas mixtures.

Mapping out parameters

I’m piecing together parameter names to avoid confusion. Sticking with (k), (C_H'), and (b) for clarity. The equations for pure gas and mixture are detailed and clearly formatted.

Addressing challenges

I'm tackling multi-solution parameter fits, polymer plasticization, and temporal effects. These intricacies make predicting pure and mixed gas sorption tricky.

Piecing together

I’m structuring sections on sorption differences, the dual-mode model for pure gases, its extension to mixed gases, and the associated challenges. This progression seems logical and effective.