posted on 2005-09-15, 00:00authored byPiotr Kowalczyk, Hideki Tanaka, Robert Hołyst, Katsumi Kaneko, Takumi Ohmori, Junichi Miyamoto
Grand canonical Monte Carlo (GCMC) simulations were used for the modeling of the hydrogen adsorption
in idealized graphite slitlike pores. In all simulations, quantum effects were included through the Feynman
and Hibbs second-order effective potential. The simulated surface excess isotherms of hydrogen were used
for the determination of the total hydrogen storage, density of hydrogen in graphite slitlike pores, distribution
of pore sizes and volumes, enthalpy of adsorption per mole, total surface area, total pore volume, and average
pore size of pitch-based activated carbon fibers. Combining experimental results with simulations reveals
that the density of hydrogen in graphite slitlike pores at 303 K does not exceed 0.014 g/cm3, that is, 21% of
the liquid-hydrogen density at the triple point. The optimal pore size for the storage of hydrogen at 303 K in
the considered pore geometry depends on the pressure of storage. For lower storage pressures, p < 30MPa,
the optimal pore width is equal to a 2.2 collision diameter of hydrogen (i.e., 0.65 nm), whereas, for p ≅
50MPa, the pore width is equal to an approximately 7.2 collision diameter of hydrogen (i.e., 2.13 nm). For
the wider pores, that is, the pore width exceeds a 7.2 collision diameter of hydrogen, the surface excess of
hydrogen adsorption is constant. The importance of quantum effects is recognized in narrow graphite slitlike
pores in the whole range of the hydrogen pressure as well as in wider ones at high pressures of bulk hydrogen.
The enthalpies of adsorption per mole for the considered carbonaceous materials are practically constant
with hydrogen loading and vary within the narrow range qst ≅ 7.28−7.85 kJ/mol. Our systematic study of
hydrogen adsorption at 303 K in graphite slitlike pores gives deep insight into the timely problem of hydrogen
storage as the most promising source of clean energy. The calculated maximum storage of hydrogen is equal
to ≈1.4 wt %, which is far from the United States Department of Energy (DOE) target (i.e., 6.5 wt %), thus
concluding that the total storage amount of hydrogen obtained at 303 K in graphite slitlike pores of carbon
fibers is not sufficient yet.