Optimum Conditions for Adsorptive Storage
Top Cited Papers
- 17 January 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Langmuir
- Vol. 22 (4), 1688-1700
- https://doi.org/10.1021/la0523816
Abstract
The storage of gases in porous adsorbents, such as activated carbon and carbon nanotubes, is examined here thermodynamically from a systems viewpoint, considering the entire adsorption−desorption cycle. The results provide concrete objective criteria to guide the search for the “Holy Grail” adsorbent, for which the adsorptive delivery is maximized. It is shown that, for ambient temperature storage of hydrogen and delivery between 30 and 1.5 bar pressure, for the optimum adsorbent the adsorption enthalpy change is 15.1 kJ/mol. For carbons, for which the average enthalpy change is typically 5.8 kJ/mol, an optimum operating temperature of about 115 K is predicted. For methane, an optimum enthalpy change of 18.8 kJ/mol is found, with the optimum temperature for carbons being 254 K. It is also demonstrated that for maximum delivery of the gas the optimum adsorbent must be homogeneous, and that introduction of heterogeneity, such as by ball milling, irradiation, and other means, can only provide small increases in physisorption-related delivery for hydrogen. For methane, heterogeneity is always detrimental, at any value of average adsorption enthalpy change. These results are confirmed with the help of experimental data from the literature, as well as extensive Monte Carlo simulations conducted here using slit pore models of activated carbons as well as atomistic models of carbon nanotubes. The simulations also demonstrate that carbon nanotubes offer little or no advantage over activated carbons in terms of enhanced delivery, when used as storage media for either hydrogen or methane.Keywords
This publication has 49 references indexed in Scilit:
- Adsorption of Gases in Metal Organic Materials: Comparison of Simulations and ExperimentsThe Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 2005
- Molecular Dynamics Simulations on the Effects of Diameter and Chirality on Hydrogen Adsorption in Single Walled Carbon NanotubesThe Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 2005
- Thermodynamic limits on hydrogen storage in sodalite framework materials: a molecular mechanics investigationMicroporous and Mesoporous Materials, 2005
- Methodological, applied and thermodynamic aspects of hydrogen sorption by graphite and related carbon nanostructuresRussian Chemical Reviews, 2004
- Mechanisms and Rates of InterstitialDiffusion in CrystallinePhysical Review Letters, 2003
- Advances in the study of methane storage in porous carbonaceous materialsFuel, 2002
- Characterization of adsorbents by energy profile of adsorbed moleculesColloids and Surfaces A: Physicochemical and Engineering Aspects, 2001
- Molecular simulation of hydrogen adsorption in graphitic nanofibresPhysical Chemistry Chemical Physics, 2001
- High H 2 Uptake by Alkali-Doped Carbon Nanotubes Under Ambient Pressure and Moderate TemperaturesScience, 1999
- Path integral simulations of mixed para-D2 and ortho-D2 clusters: The orientational effectsThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1994