Page 18 - Adsorbents fundamentals and applications
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COMMERCIAL SORBENTS AND APPLICATIONS  3

            with carbon molecular sieve. The feasibility for propane/propylene separations
            by using AlPO 4 -14 has been demonstrated (see Chapter 10). The upgrading of
            natural gas by removal of nitrogen from methane is a large potential application
            for kinetic separation. This subject will also be discussed in Chapter 10.
              For equilibrium separation, the starting point for sorbent design/selection is to
            examine the fundamental properties of the targeted molecule that is to be adsorbed
            (compared with the other molecules in the mixture): polarizability, magnetic
            susceptibility, permanent dipole moment, and quadrupole moment. If the targeted
            molecule has high polarizability and magnetic susceptibility, but no polarity,
            carbon with a high surface area would be a good candidate. Sorbents with highly
            polar surfaces (e.g., activated alumina, silica gel, and zeolites) would be desirable
            for a targeted molecule that has a high dipole moment (and high polarizability). If
            the targeted molecule has a high quadrupole moment, sorbents with surfaces that
            have high electric field gradients are needed. Zeolites are the only such sorbents,
            as the cations are dispersed above the negatively charged oxides on their surfaces.
            Cations with high valences (i.e., charges) and small ionic radii would result in
            strong interactions. The methodology for calculating these interactions is given
            in Chapter 2 (for all sorbents) and Chapter 7 (for zeolites). The above discussion
            applies only to the bonding between the targeted molecule and the adsorption site.
            The targeted molecule also interacts with other atoms on the surfaces of the pore.
            These interactions are secondary but are also important. Monte Carlo simulation
            includes pairwise additivity and integrates the interactions over all sites. Sorbent
            design/selection is a complex problem, because the process for which the sorbent
            is used needs to be considered at the same time. For purification, particularly
            ultrapurification, strong adsorption bonds are needed. Strong bond yields high
            Henry’s constant, which leads to ultrahigh product purity. Sorbents that form
            weak chemical bonds with the targeted molecule can be particularly useful. For
            this type of sorbents, molecular orbital theory is the most powerful tool for
            sorbent design, and is discussed in Chapter 8.
              For kinetic separation, the pore size needs to be precisely tailored to lie
            between the kinetic diameters of the two molecules that are to be separated.
            Many microporous molecular sieves with various pore dimensions have been
            synthesized (Hartman and Kevan, 1999), which have yet to be used as sorbents.



            1.2. COMMERCIAL SORBENTS AND APPLICATIONS
            Only four types of generic sorbents have dominated the commercial use of adsorp-
            tion: activated carbon, zeolites, silica gel, and activated alumina. Estimates of
            worldwide sales of these sorbents are (Humphrey and Keller, 1997)


                              Activated carbon    $1 billion
                              Zeolites            $100 million
                              Silica gel          $27 million
                              Activated alumina   $26 million
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