Effects of Graphene Layer Size on the Adsorption of Fluids on Graphitized Thermal Carbon Black. A Computer Simulation Study

The adsorption of Lennard-Jones fluids (argon and nitrogen) onto a graphitized thermal carbon black surface was studied with a Grand Canonical Monte Carlo Simulation (GCMC). The surface was assumed to be finite in length and composed of three graphene layers. When the GCMC simulation was used to des...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: P. Luangkiattikhun, A. Wongkoblap, D.D. Do
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi - SAGE Publishing 2006-04-01
Series:Adsorption Science & Technology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1260/026361706778812835
Description
Summary:The adsorption of Lennard-Jones fluids (argon and nitrogen) onto a graphitized thermal carbon black surface was studied with a Grand Canonical Monte Carlo Simulation (GCMC). The surface was assumed to be finite in length and composed of three graphene layers. When the GCMC simulation was used to describe adsorption on a graphite surface, an over-prediction of the isotherm was consistently observed in the pressure regions where the first and second layers are formed. To remove this over-prediction, surface mediation was accounted for to reduce the fluid–fluid interaction. Do and co-workers have introduced the so-called surface-mediation damping factor to correct the over-prediction for the case of a graphite surface of infinite extent, and this approach has yielded a good description of the adsorption isotherm. In this paper, the effects of the finite size of the graphene layer on the adsorption isotherm and how these would affect the extent of the surface mediation were studied. It was found that this finite-surface model provides a better description of the experimental data for graphitized thermal carbon black of high surface area (i.e. small crystallite size) while the infinite-surface model describes data for carbon black of very low surface area (i.e. large crystallite size).
ISSN:0263-6174
2048-4038