Literature DB >> 18433152

Diffusion and separation of CO2 and CH4 in silicalite, C168 schwarzite, and IRMOF-1: a comparative study from molecular dynamics simulation.

Ravichandar Babarao1, Jianwen Jiang.   

Abstract

Recently we have investigated the storage and adsorption selectivity of CO(2) and CH(4) in three different classes of nanoporous materialssilicalite, IRMOF-1, and C(168) schwarzite through Monte Carlo simulation (Babarao, R.; Hu, Z.; Jiang, J. Langmuir, 2007, 23, 659). In this work, the self-, corrected, and transport diffusivities of CO(2) and CH(4) in these materials are examined using molecular dynamics simulation. The activation energies at infinite dilution are evaluated from the Arrhenius fits to the diffusivities at various temperatures. As loading increases, the self-diffusivities in the three frameworks decrease as a result of the steric hindrance; the corrected diffusivities remain nearly constant or decrease approximately linearly depending on the adsorbate and framework; and the transport diffusivities generally increase except for CO(2) in IRMOF-1. The correlation effects are identified to reduce from MFI, C(168) to IRMOF-1, in accordance with the porosity increasing in the three frameworks. Predictions of self-, corrected, and transport diffusivities for pure CO(2) and CH(4) from the Maxwell-Stefan formulation match the simulation results well. In a CO(2)/CH(4) mixture, the self-diffusivities decreases with loading, and good agreement is found between simulated and predicted results. On the basis of the adsorption and self-diffusivity in the mixture, the permselectivity is found to be marginal in IRMOF-1, slightly enhanced in MFI, and greatest in C(168) schwarzite. Although IRMOF-1 has the largest storage capacity for CH(4) and CO(2), its selectivity is not satisfactory.

Entities:  

Year:  2008        PMID: 18433152     DOI: 10.1021/la703434s

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Langmuir        ISSN: 0743-7463            Impact factor:   3.882


  5 in total

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5.  Glucose recovery from aqueous solutions by adsorption in metal-organic framework MIL-101: a molecular simulation study.

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Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2015-08-05       Impact factor: 4.379

  5 in total

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