TY - JOUR
T1 - Experimental and theoretical insight of nonisothermal adsorption kinetics for a single component adsorbent-adsorbate system
AU - Loh, Wai Soong
AU - Chakraborty, Anutosh
AU - Saha, Bidyut Baran
AU - Ng, Kim Choon
PY - 2012/4/12
Y1 - 2012/4/12
N2 - A theoretical framework is proposed to describe the temperature-dependent adsorption kinetics and their interpretation of measured uptake curves of four types of adsorbate, namely, methane and halogenated refrigerants (R134a, R410a, and R507a) onto a pitch-based activated carbon, Maxsorb III. The model requires only two measurable data from the experiments, that is, the adsorbent temperature and system pressure during the adsorption dynamics. We have demonstrated that the temperature dependency adsorption has significant influence on the intrapellet diffusion coefficients of the linear driving force (LDF) model. A modified LDF model is proposed in this paper, and it is validated using the uptake behavior of these adsorbates; good agreement is found between the proposed kinetics model and the experimental uptake. The parameters postulated in the model are consistent and reproducible and agree well with a priori estimates. The model provides a useful theoretical basis for the analysis of rapid sorption processes for which the isothermal approximation is no longer valid.
AB - A theoretical framework is proposed to describe the temperature-dependent adsorption kinetics and their interpretation of measured uptake curves of four types of adsorbate, namely, methane and halogenated refrigerants (R134a, R410a, and R507a) onto a pitch-based activated carbon, Maxsorb III. The model requires only two measurable data from the experiments, that is, the adsorbent temperature and system pressure during the adsorption dynamics. We have demonstrated that the temperature dependency adsorption has significant influence on the intrapellet diffusion coefficients of the linear driving force (LDF) model. A modified LDF model is proposed in this paper, and it is validated using the uptake behavior of these adsorbates; good agreement is found between the proposed kinetics model and the experimental uptake. The parameters postulated in the model are consistent and reproducible and agree well with a priori estimates. The model provides a useful theoretical basis for the analysis of rapid sorption processes for which the isothermal approximation is no longer valid.
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U2 - 10.1021/je201210t
DO - 10.1021/je201210t
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84859786384
SN - 0021-9568
VL - 57
SP - 1174
EP - 1185
JO - Journal of Chemical and Engineering Data
JF - Journal of Chemical and Engineering Data
IS - 4
ER -