1. Enhanced CO2 Solubility in Hybrid MCM-41: Molecular Simulations and Experiments
- Author
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Fabien Porcheron, Linh Ngoc Ho, Roland J.-M. Pellenq, and Javier Perez Pellitero
- Subjects
Chromatography ,Surface Properties ,Chemistry ,Solid surface ,Monte Carlo method ,Surfaces and Interfaces ,Carbon Dioxide ,Silicon Dioxide ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Solvent ,Adsorption ,Solubility ,Chemical engineering ,MCM-41 ,Electrochemistry ,Molecule ,General Materials Science ,Monte Carlo Method ,Spectroscopy ,Grand canonical monte carlo - Abstract
Grand canonical Monte Carlo simulations are performed in a hybrid adsorbent model in order to interpret the CO(2) solubility behavior. The hybrid adsorbent is prepared by confining a physical solvent (OMCTS) into the pores of a mimetic MCM-41 solid support. As a result, simulated adsorption isotherms of CO(2) nicely match the experimental data for three distinctive systems: bulk solvent, raw MCM-41, and hybrid MCM-41. The microscopic mechanisms underlying the apparition of enhanced solubility are then clearly identified. In fact, the presence of solvent molecules favors the layering of CO(2) molecules within the pores; therefore, the CO(2) solubility in the hybrid adsorbent markedly increases in comparison to that found in the raw adsorbent as well as in the bulk solvent. In addition, a good understanding of confined solvents' properties and solid surface structures is essential to fully evaluate the efficiency of hybrid adsorbents in capturing CO(2). The sorbent-solid interactions along with the solvent molecular size's impact on CO(2) solubility are therefore investigated in this study. We found that an ideal hybrid system should possess a weak solvent-solid interaction but a strong solvent-CO(2) interaction. Besides, an optimal solvent size is obtained for the enhanced CO(2) solubility in the hybrid system. According to the simulation results, the solvent layer builds pseudomicropores inside the mesoporous MCM-41, enabling more CO(2) molecules to be absorbed under the greater influence of spatial confinement and surface interaction. In addition, the molecular sieving effect is clearly observed in the case of larger solvent molecular sizes.
- Published
- 2011