Abstract

MCM-41 and buckytubes are novel porous materials with controllable pore sizes and narrow pore size distributions. Buckytubes are carbon tubes with internal diameters in the range 1–5 urn. The structure of each tube is thought to be similar to one or more graphite sheets rolled up in a helical manner. MCM-41 is one member of a new family of highly uniform mesoporous silicate materials produced by Mobil, whose pore size can be accurately controlled in the range 1.5–10 nm. We present grand canonical Monte Carlo (GCMC) simulations of single fluid and binary mixture adsorption in a model buckytube, and nonlocal density functional theory (DFT) calculations of trace pollutant separation in a range of buckytubes and MCM-41 pores. Three adsorbed fluids are considered; methane, nitrogen and propane. The GCMC studies show that the more strongly adsorbed pure fluid is adsorbed preferentially from an equimolar binary mixture. Ideal adsorbed solution theory (IAST) is shown to give good qualitative agreement with GCMC when predicting binary mixture separations. The DFT results demonstrate the very large increases in trace pollutant separation that can be achieved by tuning the pore size, structure, temperature and pressure of the MCM-41 and buckytube adsorbent systems to their optimal values.

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