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1.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 22(37): 21031-21041, 2020 Sep 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32926038

ABSTRACT

Utilization of graphene-based materials for selective carbon dioxide capture has been demonstrated recently as a promising technological approach. In this study we report results from density functional theory calculations and molecular dynamics simulations on the adsorption of CO2, N2, and CH4 gases on a graphene sheet. We calculate adsorption isotherms of ternary and binary mixtures of these gases and reproduce the larger selectivity of CO2 to graphene relative to the other two gases. Furthermore it is shown that the confinement to two-dimensions, associated with adsorbing the CO2 gas molecules on the plane of graphene, increases their propensity to form clusters on the surface. Above a critical surface coverage (or partial pressure) of the gas, these CO2-CO2 interactions augment the effective adsorption energy to graphene, and, in part, contribute to the high selectivity of carbon dioxide with respect to nitrogen and methane. The origin of the attractive interaction between the CO2 molecules adsorbed on the surface is of electric quadrupole-quadrupole nature, in which the positively-charged carbon of one molecule interacts with the negatively-charged oxygen of another molecule. The energy of attraction of forming a CO2 dimer is predicted to be around 5-6 kJ mol-1, much higher than the corresponding values calculated for N2 and CH4. We also evaluated the adsorption energies of these gases to a graphene sheet and found that the attractions obtained using the classical force-fields might be over-exaggerated. Nevertheless, even when the magnitudes of these (classical force-field) graphene-gas interactions are scaled-down sufficiently, the tendency of CO2 molecules to cluster on the surface is still observed.

2.
Soft Matter ; 12(48): 9692-9704, 2016 Dec 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27869282

ABSTRACT

We report combined experimental and computational studies aiming to elucidate the adsorption properties of ionic and nonionic surfactants on hydrophobic polymer surface such as poly(styrene). To represent these two types of surfactants, we choose sodium dodecyl sulfate and poly(ethylene glycol)-poly(ethylene) block copolymers, both commonly utilized in emulsion polymerization. By applying quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring we find that the non-ionic surfactants are desorbed from the poly(styrene) surface slower, and at low surfactant concentrations they adsorb with stronger energy, than the ionic surfactant. If fact, from molecular dynamics simulations we obtain that the effective attractive force of these nonionic surfactants to the surface increases with the decrease of their concentration, whereas, the ionic surfactant exhibits mildly the opposite trend. We argue that the difference in this contrasting behavior stems from the physico-chemical properties of the head group. Ionic surfactants characterized by small and strongly hydrophilic head groups form an ordered self-assembled structure at the interface whereas, non-ionic surfactants with long and weakly hydrophilic head groups, which are also characterized by low persistence lengths, generate a disordered layer. Consequently, upon an increase in concentration, the layer formed by the nonionic surfactants prevents the aprotic poly(ethylene glycol) head groups to satisfy all their hydrogen bonds capabilities. As a response, water molecules intrude this surfactant layer and partially compensate for the missing interactions, however, at the expense of their ability to form hydrogen bonds as in bulk. This loss of hydrogen bonds, either of the head groups or of the intruding water molecules, is the reason the nonionic surfactants weaken their effective attraction to the interface with the increase in concentration.

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