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Molecular Physics
An International Journal at the Interface Between Chemistry and Physics
Volume 104, 2006 - Issue 4
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Original Articles

The adsorption of water in finite carbon pores

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Pages 623-637 | Received 06 Oct 2005, Accepted 01 Dec 2005, Published online: 20 Aug 2006
 

Abstract

Grand canonical Monte Carlo simulations were applied to the adsorption of SPCE model water in finite graphitic pores with different configurations of carbonyl functional groups on only one surface and several pore sizes. It was found that almost all finite pores studied exhibit capillary condensation behaviour preceded by adsorption around the functional groups. Desorption showed the reverse transitions from a filled to a near empty pore resulting in a clear hysteresis loop in all pores except for some of the configurations of the 1.0 nm pore. Carbonyl configurations had a strong effect on the filling pressure of all pores except, in some cases, in 1.0 nm pores. A decrease in carbonyl neighbour density would result in a higher filling pressure. The emptying pressure was negligibly affected by the configuration of functional groups. Both the filling and emptying pressures increased with increasing pore size but the effect on the emptying pressure was much less. At pressures lower than the pore filling pressure, the adsorption of water was shown to have an extremely strong dependence on the neighbour density with adsorption changing from Type IV to Type III to linear as the neighbour density decreased. The isosteric heat was also calculated for these configurations to reveal its strong dependence on the neighbour density. These results were compared with literature experimental results for water and carbon black and found to qualitatively agree.

Acknowledgements

This research was made possible by the Australian Research Council whose support is gratefully acknowledged. Thanks also to the University of Queensland High Performance Computing facility for a generous allocation of computing time.

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