Abstract

The adsorption separation of gaseous olefin/paraffin using porous materials has been extensively studied from both experimental and molecular simulation perspectives, while the adsorption separation of liquid-phase olefin/paraffin has been much less studied. One of the most important reasons for this is that it is difficult to measure the actual adsorption capacity of liquid-phase adsorption separation directly through experiments, and the simulation results of most studies are compared to gas-phase measurements. In this paper, the selective adsorption of linear α-olefins from three binary liquid-phase olefin/paraffin mixtures, 1-hexene/n-hexane (C6), 1-octene/n-octane (C8), and 1-decene/n-decane (C10), by zeolite adsorbents was systematically investigated using batch adsorption experiments and configurational-bias grand canonical Monte Carlo (CB-GCMC) simulations. In the batch experiments, based on the liquid-phase measurement method of the actual adsorption capacity that we developed, a modified commercial 5A zeolite with a relatively large pore volume and surface area was used for adsorption. The results showed that the modified 5A zeolite had larger actual adsorption capacities for C6 and C8 linear α-olefins, which increased by 51% and 56%, respectively, than the standard 5A zeolite that was used in our previous work. The adsorption isotherms of C6, C8, and C10 in the 5A and 13X zeolites were calculated by CB-GCMC simulations. The visualized results of density profiles showed that the olefin molecules were densely distributed at the edge of the zeolite cages and that there were cases where a single molecule was adsorbed over two adjacent cages. The good agreement between the experimental and simulated data proves the completeness of the liquid-phase measurement method that we developed and the reliability of the simulation prediction.

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