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High-Pressure Methane Adsorption in Porous Lennard-Jones Crystals.

Alec R KaijaChristopher E Wilmer
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2018)
Decades of research have yet to yield porous adsorbents that meet the U.S. Department of Energy's methane storage targets. To better understand why, we calculated high-pressure methane adsorption in 600 000 randomly generated porous crystals, or "pseudomaterials," using atomistic grand canonical Monte Carlo (GCMC) simulations. These pseudomaterials were periodic configurations of Lennard-Jones spheres whose coordinates in space, along with corresponding well depths and radii, were all chosen at random. GCMC simulations were performed for pressures of 35 and 65 bar at a temperature of 298 K. Methane adsorption was compared for all materials against a range of other properties: average well depths and radii, number density, helium void fraction, and volumetric surface area. The results reveal structure-property relationships that resemble those previously observed for metal-organic frameworks and other porous materials. We contend that our computational methodology can be useful for discovering useful structure-property relationships related to gas adsorption without requiring experimentally accessible structural data.
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