We have developed a complete force field that accurately reproduces the adsorption properties of carbon dioxide in a variety of zeolites with different topologies and compositions. The force field parameters were obtained by fitting to our own experimental data and validated with available data taken from the literature. The novelty of this force field is that it is fully transferable between different zeolite framework types, and therefore, it is applicable to all possible Si/Al ratios (with sodium as extra-framework cation) and for the first time affording the prediction of topology-specific and chemical composition-specific adsorption properties.
A novel microporous templated carbon material doped with nitrogen is synthesized by using a two‐step nanocasting process using acrylonitrile (AN) and propylene as precursors, and Na–Y zeolite as a scaffold. Liquid‐phase impregnation and in situ polymerization of the nitrogenated precursor inside the nanochannels of the inorganic scaffold, followed by gas‐phase impregnation with propylene, enables pore‐size control and functionality tuning of the resulting carbon material. The material thereby obtained has a narrow pore‐size distribution (PSD), within the micropore range, and a large amount of heteroatoms (i.e., oxygen and nitrogen). In addition, the carbon material inherits the ordered structure of the inorganic host. Such features simultaneously present in the carbon result in it being ideal for use as an electrode in a supercapacitor. Although presenting a moderately developed specific surface area (SBET = 1680 m2 g–1), the templated carbon material displays a large gravimetric capacitance (340 F g–1) in aqueous media because of the combined electrochemical activity of the heteroatoms and the accessible porosity. This material can operate at 1.2 V in an aqueous medium with good cycleability—‐beyond 10 000 cycles—and is extremely promising for use in the development of high‐energy‐density supercapacitors.
The role of micropore size and N-doping in CO2 capture by microporous carbons has been investigated by analyzing the CO2 adsorption properties of two types of activated carbons with analogous textural properties: (a) N-free carbon microspheres and (b) N-doped carbon microspheres. Both materials exhibit a porosity made up exclusively of micropores ranging in size between <0.6 nm in the case of the pristine materials and up to 1.6 nm for the highly activated carbons (47% burnoff). The N-doped carbons possess ~3 wt % of N heteroatoms that are incorporated into several types of functional groups (i.e., pyrrole/pyridone, pyridine, quaternary, and pyridine-N-oxide). Under conventional operation conditions (i.e., T ~ 0-25 °C and P(CO2) ~ 0-1 bar), CO2 adsorption proceeds via a volume-filling mechanism, the size limit for volume-filling being ~0.7-0.8 nm. Under these circumstances, the adsorption of CO2 by nonfunctionalized porous carbons is mainly determined by the volume of the micropores with a size below 0.8 nm. It was also observed that the CO2 capture capacities of undoped and N-doped carbons are analogous which shows that the nitrogen functionalities present in these N-doped samples do not influence CO2 adsorption. Taking into account the temperature invariance of the characteristic curve postulated by the Dubinin theory, we show that CO2 uptakes can be accurately predicted by using the adsorption data measured at just one temperature.
The adsorption properties of CO 2 , N 2 and CH 4 in all-silica zeolites were studied using molecular simulations. Adsorption isotherms for single components in MFI were both measured and computed showing good agreement. In addition simulations in other all silica structures were performed for a wide range of pressures and temperatures and for single components as well as binary and ternary mixtures with varying bulk compositions. The adsorption selectivity was analyzed for mixtures with bulk composition of 50:50 CO 2 /CH 4 , 50:50 CO 2 /N 2 , 10:90 CO 2 /N 2 and 5:90:5 CO 2 /N 2 /CH 4 in MFI, MOR, ISV, ITE, CHA and DDR showing high selectivity of adsorption of CO 2 over N 2 and CH 4 that varies with the type of crystal and with the mixture bulk composition.
ZIF-8 is a zeolitic imidazolate framework with very good thermal and chemical stability that opens up many applications that are not feasible by other metal-organic frameowrks (MOFs) and zeolites. Several works report the adsorption properties of ZIF-8 for strategic gases. However, despite the vast experimental corpus of data reported, there seems yet to be a dearth in the understanding of the gas adsorption properties. In this work we provide insights at a molecular level on the mechanisms governing the ZIF-8 structural deformation during molecular adsorption. We demonstrate that the ZIF-8 structural deformation during the adsorption of different molecules at cryogenic temperature goes beyond the gas-induced rotation of the imidazolate linkers. We combine experimental and simulation studies to demonstrate that this deformation is governed by the polarizability and molecular size and shape of the gases, and that the stepped adsorption behavior is defined by the packing arrangement of the guest inside the host.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.