2017 Annual Meeting
(682h) Computational Screening of Zeolites for Gas Separation Applications from Multi-Component Mixtures
Authors
To this end, we have performed Grand-Canonical Monte Carlo simulations for gases such as CO2, CH4, CO, H2, H2S, H2O and N2 to obtain gas (adsorbate) loading on existing pure-silica zeolites (adsorbents) from the IZA-SC database for different temperatures (298, 323 and 373 K) and pressures (1.3, 5.3, 10.7, 21.3, 42.7, 85.3, 101.3, 266.6 15, 580, 6500 kPa). These compute-intensive simulations are performed on a high performance computing cluster named Ada. Based on the data obtained from these molecular simulations, selectivity parameters are then obtained for different combination of gases (CO2/N2, CH4/N2, CO2/CH4, H2/CO, H2S/CH4, H2/CH4, CO2/N2/H2O, CO2/H2S/CH4, etc.) and their concentrations in feed mixtures. The data from molecular simulations is fitted to single, dual, multi-site Langmuir, extended Langmuir, Freundlich and Toth adsorption isotherm models to determine the best fitting model for each gas-zeolite data set. The isotherm parameters are obtained by solving the minimization problem of the least-square error between the data and the model prediction to global optimality. The adsorption isotherm model is then incorporated into the process model.
The top zeolites for each application of gas separation from a multi-component mixture of different concentrations are then rank ordered based on different materials-centric metrics (adsorption selectivity, saturation loadings, working capacity, heat of adsorption, Henryâs constant, etc.). In addition, zeolites which would not be suitable for a particular application are also determined. The information gathered will enable the design of novel process configurations for different gas separation applications.
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