Logo image
Methane-induced deformation of porous carbons: From normal to high-pressure operating conditions
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Methane-induced deformation of porous carbons: From normal to high-pressure operating conditions

Piotr Kowalczyk, Sylwester Furmaniak, Piotr A. Gauden and Artur P. Terzyk
Journal of Physical Chemistry. C, Vol.116(2), pp.1740-1747
2012
url
PublishedView
Published (Version of Record)

Abstract

Applying developed recently thermodynamic model of adsorption-induced deformation of microporous carbons (Kowalczyk, P.; Ciach, A.; Neimark, A. Langmuir 2008, 24, 6603), we study the deformation of carbonaceous porous materials due to adsorption of methane at 313 K and pressures up to 19 MPa. The internal adsorption stress induced by adsorbed/compressed methane is very high in the smallest micropores (for instance, adsorption stress in 0.315 nm ultra-micropore reaches 1.8 GPa at 19 MPa). Model calculations show that depending on pore structure both monotonic (i.e., expansion) and nonmonotonic (i.e., initial contraction and further expansion) methane stress-strain isotherm are theoretically predicted. Our calculations reproduce quantitatively the methane stress-strain isotherm on carbide-derived activated carbon at 313 K and experimental pressures up to 5.9 MPa. Moreover, we extrapolate methane stress-strain isotherm measured by the dilatometric method up to 19 MPa to mimic high pressure operating conditions. We predict that expansion of the studied carbon sample reaches 0.3% of volume at 19 MPa and 313 K. From our extrapolation of experimental dilatometric deformation data to high pressure conditions, we predict that the reduction of pressure from 19 to 1 MPa is accompanied by shrinkage of carbon sample by about 0.28% of volume. Comparison with recent study due to Yang et al. (Yang, K.; Lu, X.; Lin, Y.; Neimark, A. V. Energy Fuels 2010, 24, 5955-5964) shows that studied activated carbon is more resistant to adsorption stress than various coal samples. Presented study can be useful for optimization of operating conditions used in methane gas-extraction technologies.

Details

Metrics

InCites Highlights

These are selected metrics from InCites Benchmarking & Analytics tool, related to this output

Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
2 Chemistry
2.22 Inorganic & Nuclear Chemistry
2.22.336 Metal-Organic Frameworks
Web Of Science research areas
Chemistry, Physical
Materials Science, Multidisciplinary
Nanoscience & Nanotechnology
ESI research areas
Chemistry
Logo image