Abstract

Grand canonical molecular dynamics (GCMD) simulations are used to study the adsorption and desorption of Lennard-Jones nitrogen in three slit pore junction models of microporous graphite. These networks consist of two narrow pores separated by a wider (cavity) pore. We report results for cases where the narrow pore has a width of only two or three molecular diameters. Using the GCMD technique, a novel freezing transition is observed which results in pore blocking in the narrow pores of the network, which are less than 1 nm wide. This freezing results from the adsorption energy barrier at the junction between the narrow and wider pores. This type of pore blocking could account for the apparent increase in pore volume with increasing temperature that has been experimentally observed in microporous graphite systems. For networks in which the narrower pores are somewhat larger, with a width of 1.28 nm, this pore blocking effect is much reduced, and adsorbate molecules enter and fill the central cavity. In such cases, however, desorption is incomplete, some residual adsorbate remaining in the central cavity even at the lowest pressures.

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