4.6 Article

Microscopic model of carbonaceous nanoporous molecular sieves-anomalous transport in molecularly confined spaces

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 12, Issue 37, Pages 11351-11361

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/b926206g

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology
  2. Foundation for Polish Science
  3. Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education [NN 204 288634]

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To model the equilibrium and transport properties of carbonaceous molecular sieves (CMS) (i.e., carbon membranes, coals, activated carbons with ink-bottle pore geometry, etc.) the new microscopic turbostratic carbon pore model (TCPM) is developed. Analysis of experimental Gibbs excess of methane adsorption on Shirasagi CMS 3K-161 at 298 K indicates that investigated CMS is structurally a heterogonous material (i.e., it is composed of slit-shaped and turbostratic carbon nanopores of different sizes). The predicted absolute methane isotherm, total pore volume of 0.22 cm(3) g(-1), enthalpy of methane adsorption of 17.5-18.6 kJ mol(-1) on Shirasagi CMS 3K-161 at 298 K are in good agreement with existing experimental and theoretical data. Applying TCPM, we model the equilibrium and kinetic separation of hydrogen and methane mixtures adsorbed in CMS turbostratic carbon nanopores at infinite dilution and 194.7, 293.2, 313.2, 423.2, and 573.2 K. We found that near ambient temperatures one can reach equilibrium selectivity of methane over hydrogen (CH4/H-2) of 10 2 in the turbostratic carbon nanopores having effective cage sizes of approximate to 5 angstrom. Lowering an operating temperature down to the dry ice one increases the equilibrium CH4/H-2 selectivity in these nanopores up to 10(3). The kinetic selectivity of hydrogen over several investigated fluids, including: methane, argon, xenon, nitrogen, and carbon dioxide at studied operating conditions does not depend on the size of the carbon nanopore cage. This simply means that the kinetic separation factor is controlled by the size of the carbon nanopore constriction. Taking this into account, we predicted the effective size of the carbon nanopore constriction of real CMS from the experimentally measured kinetic H-2/CH4 selectivities at infinite dilution. The high kinetic H-2/CH4 selectivity of 10(2)-10(3) corresponds to the effective size of the carbon nanopore constriction of <= 2.958 angstrom (i.e., lower or equal to the collision diameter of hydrogen molecule). However, decreasing/increasing of the effective size of the carbon nanopore constriction by approximate to 0.1-0.2 angstrom exponentially increases/decreases kinetic H2/CH4 separation factor. Finally, we showed that the efficiency of kinetic separation at 298 K and infinite dilution depends on the sigma(H2)/sigma(X) and not only on sigma(H2) (where sigma denotes the collision diameter of hydrogen and the mentioned above fluids, respectively).

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