Adsorbed Natural Gas Storage in Optimized High Surface Area Microporous Carbon
ORAL
Abstract
Adsorbed natural gas (ANG) is an attractive alternative technology to compressed natural gas (CNG) or liquefied natural gas (LNG) for the efficient storage of natural gas, in particular for vehicular applications. In adsorbants engineered to have pores of a few molecular diameters, a strong van der Walls force allows reversible physisorption of methane at low pressures and room temperature. Activated carbons were optimized for storage by varying KOH:C ratio and activation temperature. We also consider the effect of mechanical compression of powders to further enhance the volumetric storage capacity. We will present standard porous material characterization (BET surface area and pore-size distribution from subcritical N$_{2}$ adsorption) and methane isotherms up to 250 bar at 293K. At sufficiently high pressure, specific surface area, methane binding energy and film density can be extracted from supercritical methane adsorption isotherms. Research supported by the California Energy Commission (500-08-022).
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Authors
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Jimmy Romanos
University of Missouri
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Tyler Rash
University of Missouri
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Erik Nordwald
University of Missouri
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Joshua Shawn Shocklee
University of Missouri
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Carlos Wexler
U of Missouri, University of Missouri - Columbia, University of Missouri
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Peter Pfeifer
University of Missouri