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How realistic is the pore size distribution calculated from adsorption isotherms if activated carbon is composed of fullerene-like fragments?
Journal article   Peer reviewed

How realistic is the pore size distribution calculated from adsorption isotherms if activated carbon is composed of fullerene-like fragments?

Artur P Terzyk, Sylwester Furmaniak, Peter J. F Harris, Piotr A Gauden, Jerzy Włoch, Piotr Kowalczyk and Gerhard Rychlicki
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics : PCCP, Vol.9(44), pp.5919-5927
2007
PMID: 17989800

Abstract

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.

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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
Physics, Atomic, Molecular & Chemical
ESI research areas
Chemistry
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