Methane storage in wet carbon of tailored pore sizes
β Scribed by Jia Liu; Yaping Zhou; Yan Sun; Wei Su; Li Zhou
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 546 KB
- Volume
- 49
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0008-6223
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β¦ Synopsis
Based on the storage mechanism of methane in wet carbon, the pore size of activated carbon must match the dimension of methane hydrates, and 1.6-2.8 nm was recognized as the optimal pore size. Targeting at the optimal pore size, a progressive activation process was applied on corncob precursors and a carbon possessing abundant pores of the optimal size was prepared. Both gravimetric and volumetric storage capacity of the carbon were experimentally measured, and a theoretical volumetric capacity (TVC) was defined on discussing the transformation from gravimetric to volumetric capacities. It was shown that pore volume and pore size of carbon are decisive factors for the storage capacity, which was greatly raised up through pore size optimization. Sixty three weight percentage of the gravimetric storage capacity, 290 and 204 V/V of the TVC and experimental volumetric storage capacity were reached, which were the highest amounts reported in literature. Compared to CNG (compressed natural gas), the storage method in wet carbon stored same quantity of methane at half storage pressure.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Methane production in town gas (45-50% H,, 2&25% CH,, 8-12% COz, 7-12% CO, 6-10% N,) stored in an underground aquifer proceeds by reduction of CO2 and CO with considerable H, consumption, leading to significant loss of volume, and, in the extreme, to unacceptable alteration of combustion properties.
The combined effect of pore size and pore volume on the equilibrium adsorption capacity and the adsorption kinetics for a series of normal alkanes is determined. The selected adsorbents, activated carbon fibers (ACFs) and air activated phenolic fibers (AAPFs), possess a range of micropore sizes and