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Adsorptive Separation and Sequestration of Krypton, I and C14 on Diamond Nanoparticles
Author(s) -
Tushar K. Ghosh,
Sudarsha Loyalka,
Mark A. Prelas,
Dabir S. Viswanath
Publication year - 2015
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/1178432
Subject(s) - diamond , adsorption , desorption , materials science , krypton , irradiation , chemical engineering , specific surface area , nanoparticle , boron , nanotechnology , analytical chemistry (journal) , chemistry , composite material , xenon , chromatography , organic chemistry , physics , nuclear physics , engineering , catalysis
The objective of this research proposal was to address the separation and sequestration of Kr and I from each other using nano-sized diamond particles and retaining these in diamond until they decay to the background level or can be used as a byproduct. Following removal of Kr and I, an adsorbent will be used to adsorb and store CO2 from the CO2 rich stream. A Field Enhanced Diffusion with Optical Activation (FEDOA-a large scale process that takes advantage of thermal, electrical, and optical activation to enhance the diffusion of an element into diamond structure) was used to load Kr and I on micron or nano sized particles having a larger relative surface area. The diamond particles can be further increased by doping it with boron followed by irradiation in a neutron flux. Previous studies showed that the hydrogen storage capacity could be increased significantly by using boron-doped irradiated diamond particles. Diamond powders were irradiated for a longer time by placing them in a quartz tube. The surface area was measured using a Quantachrome Autosorb system. No significant increase in the surface area was observed. Total surface area was about 1.7 m2/g. This suggests the existence of very minimal pores. Interestinglymore » it showed hysteresis upon desorption. A reason for this may be strong interaction between the surface and the nitrogen molecules. Adsorption runs at higher temperatures did not show any adsorption of krypton on diamond. Use of a GC with HID detector to determine the adsorption capacity from the breakthrough curves was attempted, but experimental difficulties were encountered.« less

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