4.7 Article

Supercritical adsorption in micro- and meso-porous carbons and its utilisation for textural characterisation

Journal

MICROPOROUS AND MESOPOROUS MATERIALS
Volume 308, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.micromeso.2020.110537

Keywords

Supercritical adsorption; Mesoporous carbon; Activated carbon; Characterisation

Funding

  1. CSIRO
  2. Marit Mohn Scholarship at the Department of Chemical Engineering, Imperial College London
  3. BP International Centre for Advanced Materials through a Kathleen Lonsdale research fellowship

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Understanding supercritical gas adsorption in porous carbons requires consistency between experimental measurements at representative conditions and theoretical adsorption models that correctly account for the solid's textural properties. We have measured unary CO2 and CH4 adsorption isotherms on a commercial mesoporous carbon up to 25 MPa at 40 degrees C, 60 degrees C and 80 degrees C. The experimental data are successfully described using a model based on the lattice Density Functional Theory (DFT) that has been newly developed for cylindrical pores and used alongside Ar (87K) physisorption to extract the representative pore sizes of the adsorbent. The agreement between model and experiments also includes important thermodynamic parameters, such as Henry constants and the isosteric heat of adsorption. The general applicability of our integrated workflow is validated by extending the analysis to a comprehensive literature data set on a microporous activated carbon. This comparison reveals the distinct pore-filling behaviour in micro- and mesopores at supercritical conditions, and highlights the limitations associated with using slit-pore models for the characterisation of porous carbons with significant amounts of mesoporosity. The lattice DFT represents a departure from simple adsorption models, such as the Langmuir equation, which cannot capture pore size dependent adsorption behaviour, and a practical alternative to molecular simulations, which are computationally expensive to implement.

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