Anomalous Characteristics of a PVDC Carbon Adsorbant

ORAL

Abstract

Nanoporous carbon produced by the pyrolisis of poly(vinylidene chloride-co-vinyl chloride) shows remarkably high adsorption of molecular hydrogen despite its relatively low surface area. In particular, its room temperature volumetric storage is significantly higher than other carbons with surface areas four times higher. In this talk we will present experimental hydrogen adsorption isotherms (and low-temperature isosteric heats of adsorption), subcritical nitrogen adsorption, real space images (TEM), and inelastic neutron scattering. In all cases, the sample characteristics are quite unusual. Whereas the sample under consideration is quite unusual in its high hydrogen sorption capacity, other samples in the literature also show similar unusual characteristics, suggesting the presence of phenomena not fully understood by standard adsorption theory.

*This material is based upon work supported in part by the Department of Energy under Award Nos. DE-FG02-07ER46411, DE-FG36-08GO18142, and DE-AC02-06CH11357.

Authors

  • Carlos Wexler

    • University of Missouri Columbia
  • Matthew Beckner

    • University of Missouri Columbia
  • Jimmy Romanos

    • University of Missouri Columbia
  • Tyler Rash

    • University of Missouri Columbia
  • Peter Pfeifer

    • University of Missouri Columbia
  • Raina Olsen

    • University of Missouri Columbia