Computer Simulation of Isothermal Mass Transport in Graphite Slit Pores

Abstract
Results are presented from a simulation study of the mass transport of oxygen and nitrogen through graphite slit pores. The work is motivated by an attempt to understand the molecular origins of the kinetic selectivity displayed when air is separated into its major components using pressure swing adsorption. A combination of non-equilibrium molecular dynamics (NEMD), equilibrium molecular dynamics (EMD) and grand canonical Monte Carlo methods has been employed in our study to extract the maximum information. Transport diffusivities, self-diffusivities, permeabilities and Darken thermodynamic factors have been calculated as a function of pore width and temperature for pure component oxygen and nitrogen. In addition, new EMD simulation data for an 80:20 mixture of nitrogen and oxygen is reported, including a direct calculation of the Stefan-Maxwell coefficients. The results are discussed in terms of the oxygen selectivity and the possible mechanisms, which increase or decrease this quantity. We find that the pore width behaviour of the diffusion coefficients consists of three distinct regimes: a regime at larger pore widths in which single component diffusion coefficients are largely independent of pore width, an optimum pore width at which both diffusivities increase substantially but the slit pore is selective towards nitrogen, and a regime at very low pore widths at which the diffusivities decrease sharply, but the slits are selective towards oxygen. The mechanism behind each of these regimes is discussed in terms of “entropic” effects and potential barrier heights. We have also found that permeability selectivity is substantially reduced in a mixture of the two gases with a composition similar to that of air. Cross diffusion coefficients in the mixture have been calculated and shown to be non-negligible.