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Can carbon surface oxidation shift the pore size distribution curve calculated from Ar, N2 and C02 adsorption isotherms? Simulation results for a realistic carbon model
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Can carbon surface oxidation shift the pore size distribution curve calculated from Ar, N2 and C02 adsorption isotherms? Simulation results for a realistic carbon model

Sylwester Furmaniak, Artur P Terzyk, Piotr A Gauden, Peter J. F Harris and Piotr Kowalczyk
Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter, Vol.21(31), 315005
2009

Abstract

Using the virtual porous carbon model proposed by Harris et al, we study the effect of carbon surface oxidation on the pore size distribution (PSD) curve determined from simulated Ar, N2 and CO2 isotherms. It is assumed that surface oxidation is not destructive for the carbon skeleton, and that all pores are accessible for studied molecules (i.e., only the effect of the change of surface chemical composition is studied). The results obtained show two important things, i.e., oxidation of the carbon surface very slightly changes the absolute porosity (calculated from the geometric method of Bhattacharya and Gubbins (BG)); however, PSD curves calculated from simulated isotherms are to a greater or lesser extent affected by the presence of surface oxides. The most reliable results are obtained from Ar adsorption data. Not only is adsorption of this adsorbate practically independent from the presence of surface oxides, but, more importantly, for this molecule one can apply the slit-like model of pores as the first approach to recover the average pore diameter of a real carbon structure. For nitrogen, the effect of carbon surface chemical composition is observed due to the quadrupole moment of this molecule, and this effect shifts the PSD curves compared to Ar. The largest differences are seen for CO2, and it is clearly demonstrated that the PSD curves obtained from adsorption isotherms of this molecule contain artificial peaks and the average pore diameter is strongly influenced by the presence of electrostatic adsorbate–adsorbate as well as adsorbate–adsorbent interactions.

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
2 Chemistry
2.90 Water Treatment
2.90.27 Adsorption
Web Of Science research areas
Physics, Condensed Matter
ESI research areas
Physics
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