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1.
E. A. Ustinov  D. D. Do 《Adsorption》2005,11(5-6):455-477
Adsorption of argon at its boiling point in finite cylindrical pores is considered by means of the non-local density functional theory (NLDFT) with a reference to MCM-41 silica. The NLDFT was adjusted to amorphous solids, which allowed us to quantitatively describe argon adsorption isotherm on nonporous reference silica in the entire bulk pressure range. In contrast to the conventional NLDFT technique, application of the model to cylindrical pores does not show any layering before the phase transition in conformity with experimental data. The finite pore is modeled as a cylindrical cavity bounded from its mouth by an infinite flat surface perpendicular to the pore axis. The adsorption of argon in pores of 4 and 5 nm diameters is analyzed in canonical and grand canonical ensembles using a two-dimensional version of NLDFT, which accounts for the radial and longitudinal fluid density distributions. The simulation results did not show any unusual features associated with accounting for the outer surface and support the conclusions obtained from the classical analysis of capillary condensation and evaporation. That is, the spontaneous condensation occurs at the vapor-like spinodal point, which is the upper limit of mechanical stability of the liquid-like film wetting the pore wall, while the evaporation occurs via a mechanism of receding of the semispherical meniscus from the pore mouth and the complete evaporation of the core occurs at the equilibrium transition pressure. Visualization of the pore filling and empting in the form of contour lines is presented.  相似文献   

2.
This paper presents a thermodynamic analysis of capillary condensation phenomena in cylindrical pores. Here, we modified the Broekhoff and de Boer (BdB) model for cylindrical pores accounting for the effect of the pore radius on the potential exerted by the pore walls. The new approach incorporates the recently published standard nitrogen and argon adsorption isotherm on nonporous silica LiChrospher Si-1000. The developed model is tested against the nonlocal density functional theory (NLDFT), and the criterion for this comparison is the condensation/evaporation pressure versus the pore diameter. The quantitative agreement between the NLDFT and the refined version of the BdB theory is ascertained for pores larger than 2 nm. The modified BdB theory was applied to the experimental adsorption branch of adsorption isotherms of a number of MCM-41 samples to determine their pore size distributions (PSDs). It was found that the PSDs determined with the new BdB approach coincide with those determined with the NLDFT (also using the experimental adsorption branch). As opposed to the NLDFT, the modified BdB theory is very simple in its utilization and therefore can be used as a convenient tool to obtain PSDs of all mesoporous solids from the analysis of the adsorption branch of adsorption isotherms of any subcritical fluids.  相似文献   

3.
In this paper, we applied a version of the nonlocal density functional theory (NLDFT) accounting radial and longitudinal density distributions to study the adsorption and desorption of argon in finite as well as infinite cylindrical nanopores at 87.3 K. Features that have not been observed before with one-dimensional NLDFT are observed in the analysis of an inhomogeneous fluid along the axis of a finite cylindrical pore using the two-dimensional version of the NLDFT. The phase transition in pore is not strictly vapor-liquid transition as assumed and observed in the conventional version, but rather it exhibits a much elaborated feature with phase transition being complicated by the formation of solid phase. Depending on the pore size, there are more than one phase transition in the adsorption-desorption isotherm. The solid formation in finite pore has been found to be initiated by the presence of the meniscus. Details of the analysis of the extended version of NLDFT will be discussed in the paper.  相似文献   

4.
We report results of nitrogen and argon adsorption experiments performed at 77.4 and 87.3 K on novel micro/mesoporous silica materials with morphologically different networks of mesopores embedded into microporous matrixes: SE3030 silica with worm-like cylindrical channels of mode diameter of approximately 95 angstroms, KLE silica with cage-like spheroidal pores of ca. 140 angstroms, KLE/IL silica with spheroidal pores of approximately 140 angstroms connected by cylindrical channels of approximately 26 angstroms, and, also for a comparison, on Vycor glass with a disordered network of pores of mode diameter of approximately 70 angstroms. We show that the type of hysteresis loop formed by adsorption/desorption isotherms is determined by different mechanisms of condensation and evaporation and depends upon the shape and size of pores. We demonstrate that adsorption experiments performed with different adsorptives allow for detecting and separating the effects of pore blocking/percolation and cavitation in the course of evaporation. The results confirm that cavitation-controlled evaporation occurs in ink-bottle pores with the neck size smaller than a certain critical value. In this case, the pressure of evaporation does not depend upon the neck size. In pores with larger necks, percolation-controlled evaporation occurs, as observed for nitrogen (at 77.4 K) and argon (at 87.3 K) on porous Vycor glass. We elaborate a novel hybrid nonlocal density functional theory (NLDFT) method for calculations of pore size distributions from adsorption isotherms in the entire range of micro- and mesopores. The NLDFT method, applied to the adsorption branch of the isotherm, takes into account the effect of delayed capillary condensation in pores of different geometries. The pore size data obtained by the NLDFT method for SE3030, KLE, and KLE/IL silicas agree with the data of SANS/SAXS techniques.  相似文献   

5.
E. A. Ustinov 《Adsorption》2008,14(2-3):171-179
We analyze argon adsorption isotherms and isosteric heat of adsorption on graphitized and nongraphitized carbon black and silica surfaces by means of nonlocal density functional theory (NLDFT). It is shown that in the case of graphitized carbon black the behavior of the adsorbed phase is nearly identical to that in the bulk phase at a distance larger than about 3-4 molecular diameters from the surface. At a smaller distance argon forms solid-like molecular layers at a temperature at least 3.5 K above the triple point, with the interlayer distance being markedly smaller than the argon collision diameter. In the case of defected or amorphous surfaces adsorbed argon is liquid-like below its triple point. Our extension of the Tarazona NLDFT to amorphous solids (NLDFT-AS) and the Kierlik and Rosinberg version of NLDFT excellently fit argon adsorption isotherms and properly predict the isosteric heat of adsorption. We showed that the surface roughness affects the calculated heat of adsorption, which allowed us to adjust the width of the diffuse zone of the nongraphitized carbon black and the silica surface.  相似文献   

6.
To examine the nature of the adsorption and desorption branches in hysteretic adsorption isotherms of gases on mesoporous materials, we measured the temperature dependence of the adsorption and desorption isotherms of argon, oxygen, and carbon dioxide onto MCM-41 with a pore diameter of 4.4 nm. The results clearly show that in the open-ended cylindrical pores of MCM-41, capillary condensation rather than evaporation takes place near a thermodynamical equilibrium transition, as opposed to the general statement that capillary evaporation can occur via a meniscus formed at the pore mouth, and, thus, takes place at equilibrium.  相似文献   

7.
Hydrogen adsorption isotherms were measured both at cryogenic temperatures below 1 atm and at ambient temperature at high pressures, up to 90 atm, on selected porous carbons with various pore structures. The nonlocal density functional theory (NLDFT) model was used to calculate the pore size distributions (PSDs) of the carbons, from H2 adsorption isotherms measured at 77 K, and then to predict H2 adsorption on these carbons at 87 and 298 K. An excellent agreement between the predicted and measured data was obtained. Prior to analyzing the porous carbons, the solid-fluid interaction parameters used in the NLDFT model were derived from H2 adsorption data measured at 77 K on nonporous carbon black. The results show that the NLDFT model with appropriate parameters may be a useful tool for optimizing carbon pore structures and designing adsorption systems for hydrogen storage applications.  相似文献   

8.
Dihydrogen adsorption at 77 K on a number of fine-particle carbon materials, activated carbons, and carbon nanotubes has been investigated. The micropore structure parameters of these materials have been determined using a volumetric comparative method and nonlocal density functional theory (NLDFT). These data processing methods lead to different values of textural parameters. This difference is attributed to the presence of specific sorption sites on the surface of real carbon materials. The pore size range in which the NLDFT method is applicable to the C-H2 system has been determined. A comparison between the hydrogen sorption properties of different carbon nanotubes is presented.  相似文献   

9.
Hydrogen in slit-like carbon nanopores at 77 K represents a quantum fluid in strong confinement. We have used path-integral grand canonical Monte Carlo and classical grand canonical Monte Carlo simulations for the investigation of the "quantumness" of hydrogen at 77 K adsorbed in slit-like carbon nanopores up to 1 MPa. We find that classical simulations overpredict the hydrogen uptake in carbon nanopores due to neglect of the quantum delocalization. Such disagreement of both simulation methods depends on the slit-like carbon pore size. However, the differences between the final uptakes of hydrogen computed from both classical and quantum simulations are not large due to a similar effective size of quantum/classical hydrogen molecules in carbon nanospaces. For both types of molecular simulations, the volumetric density of stored energy in optimal carbon nanopores exceeds 6.4 MJ dm(-3) (i.e., 45 kg m(-3); Department of Energy target for 2010). In contrast to the hydrogen adsorption isotherms, we found a large reduction of isosteric enthalpy of adsorption computed from the quantum Feynman's path-integral simulations in comparison to the classical values at 77 K and pressures up to 1 MPa. Depression of the quantum isosteric enthalpy of adsorption depends on the slit-like carbon pore size. For the narrow pores (pore width H in [0.59-0.7] nm), the reduction of the quantum isosteric enthalpy of adsorption at zero coverage is around 50% in comparison to the classical one. We observed new phenomena called, by us, the quantum confinement-inducing polymer shrinking. In carbon nanospaces, the quantum cyclic polymers shrink, in comparison to its bulk-phase counterpart, due to a strong confinement effect. At considered storage conditions, this complex phenomenon depends on the size of the slit-like carbon nanopore and the density of hydrogen volumetric energy. For the smallest nanopores and a low density of hydrogen volumetric energy, the reduction of the polymer effective size is the highest, whereas an increase of the pore size and the density of hydrogen volumetric energy causes the polymer swelling up to a value slightly below the one computed from the bulk phase. Quantum confinement-inducing polymer shrinking is of great importance for realizing the potential of quantum molecular sieves.  相似文献   

10.
A series of graphitized carbon blacks have been studied using argon and nitrogen adsorption at their boiling points. Analysis of adsorption isotherms was performed with nonlocal density functional theory (NLDFT) accounting for the Axilrod-Teller equation to describe the effect of nonadditivity of the gas-solid interaction. In our previous study [Ustinov, E. A. J. Chem. Phys. 2010, 132, 194703] we have shown that the nonadditivity effect decreases the attractive component of Ar-Ar interaction in the first molecular layer adjacent to the graphite surface by about 23%. This is a source of a large error (up to 40%) when a standard NLDFT is applied to fitting the low-temperature Ar adsorption isotherm on a graphitized carbon black. A new approach that incorporates the Axilrod-Teller equation into the standard NLDFT diminishes the relative error from 40 to 4%, which suggests that the nonadditivity correction should not be ignored in most adsorption systems including crystalline and amorphous solids. The present study is an extension of our approach to N(2) adsorption isotherms at 77.3 K on graphitized carbon blacks. We show that the approach allows to reliably determine the gas-solid molecular parameters, the gas-solid nonadditivity coefficient, the Henry coefficient, and the specific surface area. The surface areas of different carbon blacks determined with the N(2) at 77.35 K and Ar at 87.29 K are very close to each other, though in the former case the values proved to be slightly smaller presumably due to nonspherical shape of the nitrogen molecule. A comparison with the Brunauer, Emmett, and Teller method is provided.  相似文献   

11.
Using a grand canonical Monte Carlo simulation, we study argon adsorption in graphitic cylindrical pores to investigate the differences between the isosteric heat and the integral molar enthalpy under subcritical and supercritical conditions and compare these results against those for a flat graphite surface to investigate the role of confinement on the enthalpy change of adsorption. The isosteric heat curve is finite under subcritical conditions, but for supercritical adsorption, it becomes infinite at the pressure where the excess concentration versus pressure is maximum. This can be circumvented using the integral molar enthalpy, which is a better variable to describe the energy change for supercritical adsorption. Finally, the effects of pore geometry (radius and length) on argon adsorption under subcritical and supercritical conditions are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
13.
A density functional theory (DFT) constructed from the modified fundamental-measure theory and the modified Benedict-Webb-Rubin equation of state is presented. The Helmholtz free energy functional due to attractive interaction is expressed as a functional of attractive weighted-density in which the weight function is a mean-field-like type. An obvious advantage of the present theory is that it reproduces accurate bulk properties such as chemical potential, bulk pressure, vapor-liquid interfacial tension, and so forth when compared with molecular simulations and experiments with the same set of molecular parameters. Capabilities of the present DFT are demonstrated by its applicability to adsorption of argon and nitrogen on, respectively, a model cylindrical pore and mesoporous MCM-41 materials. Comparison of the theoretical results of argon in the model cylindrical pore with those from the newly published molecular simulations indicates that the present DFT predicts accurate average densities in the pore, slightly overestimates the pore pressure, and correctly describes the effect of the fluid-pore wall interaction on average densities and pressures in the pore. Application to adsorption of nitrogen on MCM-41 at 77.4 K shows that the present DFT predicts density profiles and adsorption isotherms in good agreement with those from molecular simulations and experiments. In contrast, the hysteresis loop of adsorption calculated from the mean-field theory shifts toward the low pressure region because a low bulk saturated pressure is produced from the mean-field equation of state. The present DFT offers a good way to describe the adsorption isotherms of porous materials as a function of temperature and pressure.  相似文献   

14.
A thermodynamic approach is developed in this paper to describe the behavior of a subcritical fluid in the neighborhood of vapor-liquid interface and close to a graphite surface. The fluid is modeled as a system of parallel molecular layers. The Helmholtz free energy of the fluid is expressed as the sum of the intrinsic Helmholtz free energies of separate layers and the potential energy of their mutual interactions calculated by the 10-4 potential. This Helmholtz free energy is described by an equation of state (such as the Bender or Peng-Robinson equation), which allows us a convenient means to obtain the intrinsic Helmholtz free energy of each molecular layer as a function of its two-dimensional density. All molecular layers of the bulk fluid are in mechanical equilibrium corresponding to the minimum of the total potential energy. In the case of adsorption the external potential exerted by the graphite layers is added to the free energy. The state of the interface zone between the liquid and the vapor phases or the state of the adsorbed phase is determined by the minimum of the grand potential. In the case of phase equilibrium the approach leads to the distribution of density and pressure over the transition zone. The interrelation between the collision diameter and the potential well depth was determined by the surface tension. It was shown that the distance between neighboring molecular layers substantially changes in the vapor-liquid transition zone and in the adsorbed phase with loading. The approach is considered in this paper for the case of adsorption of argon and nitrogen on carbon black. In both cases an excellent agreement with the experimental data was achieved without additional assumptions and fitting parameters, except for the fluid-solid potential well depth. The approach has far-reaching consequences and can be readily extended to the model of adsorption in slit pores of carbonaceous materials and to the analysis of multicomponent adsorption systems.  相似文献   

15.
A thermodynamic approach based on the Bender equation of state is suggested for the analysis of supercritical gas adsorption on activated carbons at high pressure. The approach accounts for the equality of the chemical potential in the adsorbed phase and that in the corresponding bulk phase and the distribution of elements of the adsorption volume (EAV) over the potential energy for gas-solid interaction. This scheme is extended to subcritical fluid adsorption and takes into account the phase transition in EAV. The method is adapted to gravimetric measurements of mass excess adsorption and has been applied to the adsorption of argon, nitrogen, methane, ethane, carbon dioxide, and helium on activated carbon Norit R1 in the temperature range from 25 to 70 degrees C. The distribution function of adsorption volume elements over potentials exhibits overlapping peaks and is consistently reproduced for different gases. It was found that the distribution function changes weakly with temperature, which was confirmed by its comparison with the distribution function obtained by the same method using nitrogen adsorption isotherm at 77 K. It was shown that parameters such as pore volume and skeleton density can be determined directly from adsorption measurements, while the conventional approach of helium expansion at room temperature can lead to erroneous results due to the adsorption of helium in small pores of activated carbon. The approach is a convenient tool for analysis and correlation of excess adsorption isotherms over a wide range of pressure and temperature. This approach can be readily extended to the analysis of multicomponent adsorption systems.  相似文献   

16.
17.
A plausible model for the structure of non-graphitizing carbon is one which consists of curved, fullerene-like fragments grouped together in a random arrangement. Although this model was proposed several years ago, there have been no attempts to calculate the properties of such a structure. Here, we determine the density, pore size distribution and adsorption properties of a model porous carbon constructed from fullerene-like elements. Using the method proposed recently by Bhattacharya and Gubbins (BG), which was tested in this study for ideal and defective carbon slits, the pore size distributions (PSDs) of the initial model and two related carbon models are calculated. The obtained PSD curves show that two structures are micro-mesoporous (with different ratio of micro/mesopores) and the third is strictly microporous. Using the grand canonical Monte Carlo (GCMC) method, adsorption isotherms of Ar (87 K) are simulated for all the structures. Finally PSD curves are calculated using the Horvath-Kawazoe, non-local density functional theory (NLDFT), Nguyen and Do, and Barrett-Joyner-Halenda (BJH) approaches, and compared with those predicted by the BG method. This is the first study in which different methods of calculation of PSDs for carbons from adsorption data can be really verified, since absolute (i.e. true) PSDs are obtained using the BG method. This is also the first study reporting the results of computer simulations of adsorption on fullerene-like carbon models.  相似文献   

18.
We propose the extension of the test-area methodology, originally proposed to evaluate the surface tension of planar fluid-fluid interfaces along a computer simulation in the canonical ensemble, to deal with the solid-fluid interfacial tension of systems adsorbed on slitlike pores using the grand canonical ensemble. In order to check the adequacy of the proposed extension, we apply the method for determining the density profiles and interfacial tension of spherical molecules adsorbed in slitlike pore with different pore sizes and solid-fluid dispersive energy parameters along the same simulation. We also calculate the solid-fluid interfacial tension using the original test-area method in the canonical ensemble. Agreement between the results obtained from both methods indicate that both methods are fully equivalent. The advantage of the new methodology is that allows to calculate simultaneously the density profiles and the amount of molecules adsorbed onto a slitlike pore, as well as the solid-fluid interfacial tension. This ensures that the chemical potential at which all properties are evaluated during the simulation is exactly the same since simulations can be performed in the grand canonical ensemble, mimicking the conditions at which the adsorption experiments are most usually carried out in the laboratory.  相似文献   

19.
We report experimental measurements of the isosteric heats of adsorption for argon and nitrogen in two microporous saccharose-based carbons, using a Tian-Calvet microcalorimeter. These data are used to test recently developed molecular models of these carbons, obtained by a constrained reverse Monte Carlo method. Grand canonical Monte Carlo simulation is used to calculate the adsorption isotherms and isosteric heats for these systems, and the results for the latter are compared to the experimental data. For argon, excellent quantitative agreement is obtained over the entire range of pore filling. In the case of nitrogen, very good agreement is obtained over the range of coverage 0.25 < or = gamma/gamma 0 < or = 0.85, but discrepancies are observed at lower and higher coverages. The discrepancy at low coverage may be due to the presence of oxygenated groups on the pore surfaces, which are not taken into account in the model. The differences at high coverage are believed to arise from the presence of a few mesopores, which again are not included in the model. Pair correlation functions (argon-carbon and argon-argon) are determined from the simulations and are discussed as a function of pore filling. Snapshots of the simulations are presented and provide a picture of the pore filling process.  相似文献   

20.
Using molecular dynamics computer simulations we investigate structural and dynamic (diffusion) properties of charged colloidal suspension confined to narrow slit pores with structureless, uncharged walls. The system is modeled on an effective level involving only the macroions, which interact via a combination of a soft-sphere and a screened Coulomb potential. The aim of our study is to identify the role of the range of the macroion-macroion interaction controlled by the inverse Debye screening length, kappa. We also compare to bulk properties at the same chemical potential as determined in parallel grand canonical Monte Carlo simulations. Our results reveal a significant influence of the interaction range which competes, however, with the influence of density. At liquidlike densities a decrease of range yields a decreasing mobility (and a corresponding enhancement of local structure) in the bulk system, whereas the reverse effect occurs in narrow slits with thickness of a few particle diameter. These differences can be traced back to the confinement-induced, and kappa-dependent, reduction of overall density compared to the bulk reservoir. We also show that an increase of kappa softens the oscillations in the normal pressure as function of the wall separation, which is consistent with experimental observations concerning the influence of addition of salt.  相似文献   

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