The physisorption mechanism of SO2 on graphitized carbon

Sulfur dioxide (SO2) in flue gases emitted from fossil fuel power plants dramatically reduces the CO2 capture efficiency via adsorption, which is due to the potential reaction of SO2 with basic functional groups on the adsorbent. Physisorption rather than chemisorption is preferred, because adsorben...

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Main Authors: Tan, Johnathan Shiliang, Do, D. D., Chew, Jia Wei
Other Authors: School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/155612
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1556122022-03-16T06:07:37Z The physisorption mechanism of SO2 on graphitized carbon Tan, Johnathan Shiliang Do, D. D. Chew, Jia Wei School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering Singapore Membrane Technology Centre Nanyang Environment and Water Research Institute Engineering::Chemical engineering Flue Gases Sulfur Dioxide Sulfur dioxide (SO2) in flue gases emitted from fossil fuel power plants dramatically reduces the CO2 capture efficiency via adsorption, which is due to the potential reaction of SO2 with basic functional groups on the adsorbent. Physisorption rather than chemisorption is preferred, because adsorbents can be more easily regenerated by either reducing the pressure or increasing the temperature. Carbon is a suitable adsorbent for SO2 capture and widely used, and therefore it is important to study SO2 adsorption onto carbon with the Monte Carlo simulation to provide microscopic details to demarcate the roles of the basal plane of the graphene layer and the functional groups in adsorption. SO2 is a polar molecule like water, as they both carry partial charges, but they interact differently with functional groups. Instead of 3D-clusters in the case of water, SO2 is localized around the functional groups and spreads over the basal plane to form 2D-molecular layers because of the strong dispersive interactions with graphite. The results indicate that the functional group has a negligible effect on the enhancement of adsorption and its role is to localize 2D-clusters of SO2 molecules. For non-graphitized carbon, we have found that the greater loadings at low pressure compared to the highly graphitized carbon is due to the presence of defects (crevices) on the basal plane surface. Finally, to describe better the experimental data, we have found that the reduction in the interactions between adsorbed molecules in the first layer is because of the repulsion of their dipoles pointing normal to the surface, a phenomenon called surface mediation and is widely used in the description of gas adsorption on surfaces. Economic Development Board (EDB) Ministry of Education (MOE) We acknowledge funding from the Singapore GSK (GlaxoSmithKline) – EDB (Economic Development Board) Trust Fund and Singapore Ministry of Education Tier 1 Grant (2019-T1-002-065). 2022-03-16T06:06:51Z 2022-03-16T06:06:51Z 2020 Journal Article Tan, J. S., Do, D. D. & Chew, J. W. (2020). The physisorption mechanism of SO2 on graphitized carbon. Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics, 22(37), 21463-21473. https://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0cp03860a 1463-9076 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/155612 10.1039/d0cp03860a 32945318 2-s2.0-85092681084 37 22 21463 21473 en 2019-T1-002-065 Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics © 2020 The Owner Societies. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Chemical engineering
Flue Gases
Sulfur Dioxide
spellingShingle Engineering::Chemical engineering
Flue Gases
Sulfur Dioxide
Tan, Johnathan Shiliang
Do, D. D.
Chew, Jia Wei
The physisorption mechanism of SO2 on graphitized carbon
description Sulfur dioxide (SO2) in flue gases emitted from fossil fuel power plants dramatically reduces the CO2 capture efficiency via adsorption, which is due to the potential reaction of SO2 with basic functional groups on the adsorbent. Physisorption rather than chemisorption is preferred, because adsorbents can be more easily regenerated by either reducing the pressure or increasing the temperature. Carbon is a suitable adsorbent for SO2 capture and widely used, and therefore it is important to study SO2 adsorption onto carbon with the Monte Carlo simulation to provide microscopic details to demarcate the roles of the basal plane of the graphene layer and the functional groups in adsorption. SO2 is a polar molecule like water, as they both carry partial charges, but they interact differently with functional groups. Instead of 3D-clusters in the case of water, SO2 is localized around the functional groups and spreads over the basal plane to form 2D-molecular layers because of the strong dispersive interactions with graphite. The results indicate that the functional group has a negligible effect on the enhancement of adsorption and its role is to localize 2D-clusters of SO2 molecules. For non-graphitized carbon, we have found that the greater loadings at low pressure compared to the highly graphitized carbon is due to the presence of defects (crevices) on the basal plane surface. Finally, to describe better the experimental data, we have found that the reduction in the interactions between adsorbed molecules in the first layer is because of the repulsion of their dipoles pointing normal to the surface, a phenomenon called surface mediation and is widely used in the description of gas adsorption on surfaces.
author2 School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering
author_facet School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering
Tan, Johnathan Shiliang
Do, D. D.
Chew, Jia Wei
format Article
author Tan, Johnathan Shiliang
Do, D. D.
Chew, Jia Wei
author_sort Tan, Johnathan Shiliang
title The physisorption mechanism of SO2 on graphitized carbon
title_short The physisorption mechanism of SO2 on graphitized carbon
title_full The physisorption mechanism of SO2 on graphitized carbon
title_fullStr The physisorption mechanism of SO2 on graphitized carbon
title_full_unstemmed The physisorption mechanism of SO2 on graphitized carbon
title_sort physisorption mechanism of so2 on graphitized carbon
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/155612
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