2008 Annual Meeting
(593e) A Monte Carlo Study of Molecular Selectivity of Binary Mixtures In Ordered and Disordered Microporous Carbon
Authors
The control of their pore size distribution is one of the issues during their synthesis, resulting mainly in size-dispersed and disordered pores. To optimize such materials, we need to identify the structural characteristics of such 3D interconnected microporous carbons as a function of the application. Indeed, the number of obtainable nanostructures is as large as the myriad of precursors. In order to investigate these issues, we performed Monte Carlo simulations to study and compare disordered and ordered microporous carbon properties. Indeed, a new class of well-controlled and 3D-interconnected ordered microporous carbon arises from in-zeolited templating synthesis. We compare ordered carbon templated by faujasite zeolite from Grand Canonical Monte Carlo simulations with several disordered carbon structures derived from an atomistic and geometrically realistic simulation technique, known as Hybrid Reverse Monte Carlo (HRMC), using as input experimental x-ray diffraction data.