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BET surface area of carbonaceous adsorbents-Verification using geometric considerations and GCMC simulations on virtual porous carbon models
Journal article   Peer reviewed

BET surface area of carbonaceous adsorbents-Verification using geometric considerations and GCMC simulations on virtual porous carbon models

Piotr A. Gauden, Artur P. Terzyk, Sylwester Furmaniak, Peter J. F. Harris and Piotr Kowalczyk
Applied Surface Science, Vol.256(17), pp.5204-5209
2010

Abstract

Computer simulation GCMC Virtual Porous Carbon Surface area BET
The applicability of BET model for calculation of surface area of activated carbons is checked by using molecular simulations. By calculation of geometric surface areas for the simple model carbon slit-like pore with the increasing width, and by comparison of the obtained values with those for the same systems from the VEGA ZZ package (adsorbate-accessible molecular surface), it is shown that the latter methods provide correct values. For the system where a monolayer inside a pore is created the ASA approach (GCMC, Ar, T = 87 K) underestimates the value of surface area for micropores (especially, where only one layer is observed and/or two layers of adsorbed Ar are formed). Therefore, we propose the modification of this method based on searching the relationship between the pore diameter and the number of layers in a pore. Finally BET; original andmodified ASA; and A, B and C-point surface areas are calculated for a series of virtual porous carbons using simulated Ar adsorption isotherms (GCMC and T = 87 K). The comparison of results shows that the BET method underestimates and not, as it was usually postulated, overestimates the surface areas of microporous carbons. (C) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
2 Chemistry
2.41 Catalysts
2.41.148 Mesoporous Silica
Web Of Science research areas
Chemistry, Physical
Materials Science, Coatings & Films
Physics, Applied
Physics, Condensed Matter
ESI research areas
Materials Science
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