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  • Contents

  • Preface

  • Plenary Papers

    • Adsorption Equilibria of Sub-Critical and Super-Critical Fluids in Carbonaceous Materials D. D. Do and H. D. Do

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Tools of characterisation

        • 2.1 Grand canonical Monte Carlo simulation

        • 2. 2 Density Functional Theory (DFT)

        • 2.3 Molecular Layer Structure Layer Theory (MLST)

        • 2.4 The Do-Method

      • 3 Results and Discussion

      • 3.1 Super-critical fluids

        • 3.1.1 Non-porous surfaces

        • 3.1.2 Slit pores

      • 3.2 Sub-critical fluid

        • 3.2.1 Non-porous surface

        • 3.2.2 Slit pores:

      • 4 Conclusions

      • 5 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Freezing/Melting in Porous Carbons F. R. Hung, R. Radhakrishnan, F. Beguin, M. Sliwinska-Bartkowiak and K. E. Gubbins

      • 1. Introduction

      • 2. Methods

        • 2.1. Simulation

        • 2.2. Experiments: Dielectric Relaxation Spectroscopy

      • 3. Results

        • 3.1. Activated Carbon Fibers (Slit-Shaped Pores)

        • 3.2. Carbon Nanotubes

      • 4. Conclusions

    • Measurement of Diffusion in Microporous Solids D. M. Ruthven

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Definition of Diffusivities

      • 3 Experimental Methods

      • 4 The ZLC Technique

      • 5 Comparison of ZLC/PFG NMR Diffusivities

      • 6 Comparison of ZLC/Frequency Response Diffusivities

      • 7 Variation of Diffusivity with Chain Length of Linear Alkanes

      • 8 Concluding Remarks

      • Notation

      • References

    • Ordered Mesoporous Carbons with New Opportunities for Adsorption Studies R. Ryoo and S. H. Joo

      • 1 INTRODUCTION

      • 2 SYNTHESIS METHOD

      • 3 STRUCTURES AND NITROGEN ADSORPTION PROPERTIES

        • 3.1 CMK-1

        • 3.2 Other Rod-Type CMK Carbons

        • 3.3 Tube-Type Carbons

      • 4 PERSPECTIVES

      • References

    • Quantum Micropore Filling and its Application Possibility T. Tanaka, Y. Hattori, K. Murata, T. Kodaira, M. Yudasaka, S. lijima and K. Kaneko

      • 1. Introduction

      • 2. Classical DFT calculation, classical GCMC simulation and effective potential for a quantum molecule

      • 3. Adsorption measurement below 30 K

      • 4. Quantum effect in Ne on AlPO4-5

      • 5. Micropore structures and quantum effect of SWNH

      • 6. Quantum molecular sieving effect of SWNH

      • 7. Acknowledgement

      • References

    • Adsorption in Microporous Materials: Analytical Equations for TYPE I Isotherms at High Pressure A. L. Myers

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Adsorption isotherms

      • 3 Gas Mixtures

      • 4 Discussion

      • References

    • New Sorbents for Desulfurization of Transportation Fuels R. T. Yang, A. Hernandez-Maldonado, A. Takahashi and F. H. Yang

      • Introduction

      • Experimental

        • Adsorbent Preparation

        • Vapor Phase Isotherms and Heat of Adsorption

        • Fixed Bed Adsorption/Breakthrough Experiments

      • Molecular Orbital Computational Details

        • Natural Bond Orbital (NBO)

        • Models for Ag-Zeolite (AgZ) and Cu-Zeolite (CuZ)

      • Results and Discussion

        • Vapor Phase Adsorption

        • Benzene/Thiophene Adsorption Isotherms

        • Comparison of Thiophene Adsorption on All Adsorbents

        • Heat of Adsorption

        • Bond Energies, Geometries andNBO Results

        • Liquid Phase Adsorption

      • Conclusions

      • Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Optimization of Continuous Chromatography Separations Z. Y. Zhang, M. Mazzotti and M. Morbidelli

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Optimization of SMB, Varicol and PowerFeed processes

      • 3 Results and discussion

        • 3.1 Comparison of 8MB and Varicol for different total number of columns

        • 3.2 Comparison of 8MB and Varicol for different product purity requirements

        • 3.3 Comparison of 8MB, Varicol and P over Feed

      • 4 Conclusions

      • References

    • Adsorption Technology for Gas Separation S. Sircar

      • INTRODUCTION

      • CASE STUDY; AIR FRACTIONATION BY ADSORPTION

      • TRENDS IN FUTURE ABSORPTIVE PROCESS DEVELOPMENTS

        • Rapid PSA

        • Novel Designs

      • Radial Bed Adsorbers (PSA and TSA)

      • Rotary Bed Adsorbers (TSA)

      • NOVEL ABSORPTIVE GAS SEPARATION CONCEPTS

        • Adsorbent Membranes

      • Molecular Sieve Carbon (MSO Membranes

      • Selective Surface Flow (SSF} Membranes

      • Simultaneous Adsorption and Reaction

      • Removal of Bulk CO-, from a Wet High Temperature Gas

      • REFERENCES

    • Carbon Composite Membranes M. Suzuki, A. Sakoda, S.-D. Bae, T. Nomura and Y.-Y. Li

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

      • 3 Results and discussions

        • 3.1 Carbon whisker membrane

        • 3.2 Carbon-coated ceramic membranes

      • 4 Conclusions

      • References

  • Invited Papers

    • On the Dominant Role of Adsorption Effects in Heterogeneous Catalysis J. F. Denayer, G. V. Baron, D. Devos, J. A. Martens and P. A. Jacobs

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Epoxidation of a-alkenes with Ti-zeolites

      • 3 Hydroconversion of n-alkanes

      • 4 Conclusion

      • 5 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Supercritical Adsorption: Paradox, Problems, and Insights L. Zhou

      • 1. Problems of supercritical adsorption

        • 1.1 Is supercritical adsorption an artificial topic?

        • 1.2 Relation and difference between sub- and super-critical adsorption

        • 1.3 Application of potential theory to supercritical adsorption

        • 1.4 Classical versus new models of supercritical adsorption

        • 1. 5 Volumetric versus gravimetric method of adsorption measurement

      • 2 A classical description of supercritical adsorption

      • 3 A straightforward method of determining absolute adsorption

      • 4 Continuity of the model and its impact on the characterization of adsorbent

      • 5 Is there a border of supercritical adsorption?

      • Acknowledgements

      • References

  • Contributed Papers

    • Microwave Drying for Preparation of Mesoporous Carbon H. Tamon, T. Yamamoto, T. Suzuki and S. R. Mukai

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

      • 3 Results and Discussion

        • 3. 1 Porous Structure ofRF Drygels

        • 3.2 Porous Structure of Carbon Gels

      • 4 Conclusion

      • 5 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Computer Simulation of Transport in Cylindrical Mesopores S. K. Bhatia and D. Nicholson

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Molecular Dynamics Simulations

      • 3 Comparison of Methods

      • 4 Transport Model

      • 5 Conclusion

      • 6 Acknowledgements

      • 7 References

    • Multicomponent Mass Transfer Diffusion Model for the Adsorption of Acid Dyes on Activated Carbon K. K. H. Choy, J. F. Porter and G. McKay

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Methods

      • 3 Results and Discussion

        • 3.1 Equilibrium Isotherm Studies

        • 3.2 Batch Kinetic Studies

      • References.

    • Sorption Thermodynamics of Nitrous Oxide/LSX Zeolite Systems M. Btilow, D. Shen and S. R. Jale

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Sorption Isosteric Method and Sorbents

      • 3 Results and Discussion

        • 3.1 Sorption Isosteres of N3O on NaLSX and CaLSX Zeolites

        • 3.2 Sorption Thermodynamics ofNfi and CO2 on NaLSX and CaLSX Zeolites

      • 4 Conclusions

      • 5 Acknowledgements

      • 6 References

    • Activated Carbon Membrane with Carbon Whisker S.-D. Bae and A. Sakoda

      • 1. INTRODUCTION

      • 2.EXPERIMENTAL

      • 3. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

      • 4. CONCLUSION

      • REFERENCES

    • Mesoporous Silica with Local MFI Structure S. P. Naik, A. S. T. Chiang, R. W. Thompson, F. C. Huang and H.-M. Kao

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimentals

      • 3 Results and discussions

      • 4 Conclusions

      • 5 References

    • Infinite Dilution Selectivity Measurements by Gas Chromatography S. Gumma and O. Talu

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Conventional Measurement Techniques

      • 3 Gas Chromatographic Techniques

      • 4 Experimental

      • 5 Results

      • 6 Conclusions

      • 7 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Adsorption Properties of Colloid-Imprinted Carbons M. Jaroniec and Z.-J. Li

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

        • 2.1 Synthesis of colloid-imprinted carbons

        • 2.2 Nitrogen adsorption measurements

      • 3 Results and Discussion

      • 4 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • On the Role of Water in the Process of Methyl Mercaptan Adsorption on Activated Carbons 5. Bashkova, A. Bagreev and T. J. Bandosz

      • Introduction

      • Methods

      • Discussion

      • Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Studies on the Adsorption Properties of Ion-Exchanged Low Silica X Zeolite H. Jiang, W. Tang, J. P. Zhang, B. Y. Zhao and Y. C. Xie

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

      • 3 Results and Discussions

        • 3.1 Influence of water adsorption on LiLSX

        • 3.2 Relationship between N2 adsorption capacity and Co2* content in CaNaLSX

      • 4 Acknowledgement

      • References

    • Carbonization of Organic Wastes Using Super-Heated Water Vapor and Their Adsorption Properties H. Yoshida, N. Miyagami and M. Terashima

      • Introduction

      • 2 Methods

        • Preparation of carbonized materials

        • Measurements of specific surface area and micro-pore volume

      • 3 Results

      • 4 Discussion

      • Acknowledgement

      • References

    • Further Successful Applications of the New Theoretical Description of Adsorption/Desorption Kinetics Based on the Statistical Rate Theory W. Rudzinski and T. Panczyk

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Theory

      • References

    • Characterization and Ethylene Adsorption Properties of Silver-Loaded PER Zeolite Potentially Used as Trap Material of Cold-Start Hydrocarbon Emission from Vehicles Y. Teraoka, H. Onoue, H. Furukawa, I. Moriguchi, H. Ogawa and M. Nakano

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

      • 3 Results and Discussion

        • 3.1 Adsorption of C2 and C3 hydrocarbons on Ag-FER

        • 3.2 Effect of metal species

        • 3.3 Effect of host zeolites

        • 3.4 Characteristics of Ag-FER as cold-HC trap material

      • References

    • Pressure-Dependent Models for Adsorption Kinetics on a CMS Y.-S. Bae, Y-K. Ryu and C.-H. Lee

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

      • 3 Mathematical Models

        • 3.1 Equilibrium Models

        • 3.2 Pressure-dependent Models for Adsorption Kinetics

      • 4 Results and Discussion

        • 4.1 Adsorption Equilibrium

        • 4.2 Adsorption Kinetics

      • 5 Conclusions

      • 6 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Preparative Enantioseparation of Fluoxetine by Simulated Moving Bed H.-W. Yu and C. B. Ching

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

        • 2. 1 Introduction of a new CSP

        • 2.2 Chemicals

        • 2.3 Instrument

        • 2.4 Adsorption Isotherm

      • 3 Results and Discussions

      • 4 Conclusions

      • 5 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Optimization Based Adaptive Control of Simulated Moving Beds G. Erdem, S. Abel, M. Mazzotti, M. Morari and M. Morbidelli

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Control concept

        • 2.1 Simplified SMB model

        • 2.2 Optimization problem

      • 3 Performance assessment of the controller

        • 3.1 Virtual SMB system

        • 3.2 Simulation result

      • 4 Conclusion

      • 5 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Mono-Methyl Paraffin Adsorptive Separation Process 5. Kulprathipanja, J. Rekoske, M. Gatter and S. Sohn

      • 1. Introduction

      • 2. MMP Sorbex™ Development

        • 2. / Silicalite Adsorbent

        • 2.2 Molecular Simulation

        • 2.3. Pulse Test

        • 2.4. Sorbex Pilot Plant Demonstration

      • 3 Conclusion

      • References:

    • Chromium (VI) and (III) Species Adsorption from Aqueous Solutions by Activated Carbon Fibers O. Astachkina, A. Lyssenko and O. Muhina

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Materials and methods

      • 3 Results and discussion

        • 3.1 Kinetics of Cr (VI) removal

        • 3.2 Kinetics of Cr(III) removal

        • 3.3 The influence of temperature on Cr(VI) species adsorption

        • 3.4 The influence of concentration

      • References

    • Treatment of Complex Wastewaters by Biosorption and Activated Carbon: Batch Studies C. Gerente, Z. Reddad, Y. Andres, C. Faur-Brasquet and P. le Clolrec

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Materiels and Methods

        • 2.1 The adsorbents

        • 2.2 Sorption experiments

      • 3 Results and Discussions

        • 3.1 Fixation ofCu2+, Ni2+ and Pb2+ in mono and multi-metallic solutions

        • 3.2 Influence of organic compounds on Cu2' fixation onto raw sugar pulp

        • 3.3 Association of pulp and activated carbon for the removal ofCu2' and phenol

      • References

    • Adsorption Characteristics of Protein-Based Ligand for Heavy Metals M. Terashima, N. Oka, T. Sei, K. Shibata and H. Yoshida

      • Introduction

      • Methods

      • Results

      • Discussion

      • References

    • Preparative Chromatography at Supercritical Conditions A. Rajendran, M. Mazzotti and M. Morbidelli

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental setup and procedure

      • 3 Experimental Results

      • 4 Conclusion

      • Reference

    • Adsorptive Separation of Oligosaccharides: Influence of Crosslinking of Cation Exchange Resins J. A. Vente, H. Bosch, A. B. de Haan and P. J. T. Bussmann

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Materials and methods

      • 3 Results and discussion

        • 3.1 Isotherms ofsaccharides on cation exchange resins

        • 3.2 Selectivity of cation exchange resins

        • 3.3 Chromatograms

      • 4 Conclusions

      • References

    • Identification and Predictive Control of a Simulated Moving Bed Process I.-H. Song, H.-K. Rhee and M. Mazzotti

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Brief description for SMB process

      • 3 Subspace identification of SMB process

      • 4 Predictive control for SMB process

      • 5 Conclusions

      • References

    • Quick and Compact Ozonation Using Siliceous Zeolite H. Fujita, T. Fujii, A. Sakoda and J. Izumi

      • Introduction

      • Materials and methods

      • Result and Discussion

        • 1. Adsorption Property of TCE

        • 2. Degradation of TCE

      • CONCLUSION

      • NOMENCLATURE

      • Reference

    • Time Resolved Multicomponent Sorption of Linear and Branched Alkane Isomers on Zeolites, Using NIR Spectroscopy A. F. P. Ferreira, M. Mittelmeijer, M. Schenk, A. Bliek and B. Smit

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental Section

      • 3 Results and discussion

      • 4 Conclusions

      • 5 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Pore Size Effects in the Liquid Phase Adsorption of Alkanes in Zeolites J. F. M. Denayer, K. de Meyer, J. A. Martens and G. V. Baron

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

      • 3 Results and Discussion

      • 4 Conclusions

      • Acknowledgements

      • 5 References

    • Detection of Freezing Point Elevation in Slit Nanospace by Atomic Force Microscopy M. Miyahara, M. Sakamoto, H. Kanda and K. Higashitani

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

      • 3 Results and discussion

        • 3.1 Ultrahigh sensitivity of vdWforce on temperature and its trick

        • 3.2 Force curves against real separation distance: freezing point vs. relation distance

      • 4 Conclusion

      • References

    • Modeling of High-Pressure Equilibrium Adsorption of Supercritical Gases on Activated Carbons. Determination of Pore Size Distribution Using a Combined DFT and EOS E. A. Ustinov and D. D. Do

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Model

      • 3 Discussion

      • 4 Conclusion

      • 5 Acknowledgements

      • 6 References

    • On the Peculiarity of the Minimum of W-Hexane Permeability in Activated Carbon J.-S. Bae and D. D. Do

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Problem Formulation on permeability

      • 3 Experimental

      • 4 Results and Discussions

      • 5 Conclusions

      • 6 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Simplified Experimental Method to Analyse Intra-Activated Carbon Particle Diffusion Based on Parallel Diffusion Model Y. Miura, Y. Otake, H. T. Chang, N. Khalili, S. Iwasawa and E. G. Furuya

      • Introduction

      • Theoretical Considerations

      • Materials and Experimental Methods

      • Results and Discussions

      • Conclusions

      • References

    • In-Situ Characterization of Ion Adsorption at Biomimetic Air/Water Interfaces T. Y. Kim, G. S. Lee and D. J. Ahn

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

      • 3 Results and Discussion

      • 4 Conclusions

      • 5 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Single and Multi Component Adsorption of Volatile Organic Compounds onto High Silica Zeolites — Discussion of Adsorbed Solution Theory P. Monneyron, M.-H. Manero and J.-N. Foussard

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental section

      • 3 Qualitative discussion of adsorption mechanism via equilibria experiments

        • 3.1 Pure component isotherms

        • 3.2 Experimental selectivities of HSZ toward binary mixtures

      • 4. Binary equilibria modeling with Adsorbed Solution Theory

        • 4.1 IAST prediction calculations

        • 4.2 RAST correlation calculations

      • References

    • Influence of VOCs Molecular Characteristics on Exothermicity of Adsorption onto Activated Carbon P. Pre, C. Faur-Brasquet and P. le Cloirec

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental Section

        • 2.1 Materials and Methods

        • 2.2 Adsorption enthalpies data

      • 3 Quantitative Structure Property Relationships (QSPRs)

        • 3.1 Data selection

        • 3.2 Statistical models

      • 4 Results and discussion

        • 4.1 Multi-linear regressions (MLR)

        • 4.2 Neural Networks (NN)

        • 4.3 Discussion

      • References

    • The Influence of Ar and He on the Rate of Adsorption and on the Adsorption Equilibrium of Alkanes in Zeolites M. C. Mittelmeijer-Hazeleger, A. F. P. Ferreira and A. Bliek

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

      • 3 Results

        • 3.1 BEA

        • 3.2 MFI

        • 3.3 PER

      • 4 Discussion

      • 5 Conclusions

      • 6 Acknowledgement

      • References

    • Modeling the Discharge Behavior of Metal Hydride Hydrogen Storage Systems 5. A. Gadre, A. D. Ebner, S. A. Al-Muhtaseb and J. A. Ritter

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

      • 3 Results and Discussion

      • 4 Acknowledgement

      • References

    • The Advanced Modeling Technology for Periodic Adsorption Process: Direct Determination of Cyclic Steady State J.-H. Yun, A. C. Stawarz and F. O. Jegede

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Cyclic Steady State Model

        • 2. 1 Discretisation Methods

        • 2.2 Periodicity Conditions

      • 3 Simulation of Literature Processes

      • References

    • Adsorption and Desorption Characteristics of Zeolite Impregnated Ceramic Honeycomb for VOC Abatement H.-S. Kim, Y.-J. Yoo, Y.-S. Ahn, M.-K. Park, K.-T. Chue and M.-H. Han

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimentation

        • 2.1 Ceramic paper making by casting

        • 2.2 Corrugation of ceramic paper

        • 2.3 Impregnation and heat treatment

        • 2.4 Static adsorption / desorption test

      • 3 Results and Discussion

        • 3.1 Equilibrium adsorption and BET surface area

        • 3.2 Adsorption properties

      • 4 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Reverse Flow Adsorption Technology for the Recycling of Homogeneous Catalysts: Selection of Suitable Adsorbents J. Dunnewijk, H. Bosch and A. B. de Haan

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Approach

      • 3 Experimental

      • 4 Experimental results

      • 5 Conclusion

      • References

    • Molecular Simulation of Gas Separation by Adsorption Processes J. P. B. Mota

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Problem formulation

      • 3 Simulation method

      • 4 Application example

      • References

    • Metal-Doped Sodium Aluminium Hydride as a Reversible Hydrogen Storage Material J. Wang, A. D. Ebner, K. R. Edison, J. A. Ritter and R. Zidan

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

      • 3 Results and discussion

      • 4 Conclusions

      • 5 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Synthesis and Dehumidification Behaviors of Monodisperse Spherical Silica Gels with Different Pore and Chemical Structures C. H. Cho, Y. J. Yoo, J. S. Kim, H. S. Kim, Y. S. Ahn and M. H. Han

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Methods

        • 2.1 Synthesis of Silica Gels

        • 2.2 Aging of Silica Gels in Basic Conditions

        • 2.3 Characterization of Silica Gels

      • 3 Results and Discussion

      • 4 Conclusion

      • 5 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Production of Hard Carbons for Lithium Ion Storage by the Co-Carbonization of Phenolic Resin Precursors S. R. Mukai, T. Tanigawa, T. Harada, T. Masuda and H. Tamon

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

      • 3 Results and Discussion

      • 4 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Novel Bioactivite Carbomineral Sorbents, Including Cluster and Carbon Nanotubes for Superselective Purification of Biodiesel Fuel — Liquid Hydrocarbons and Carbonhydrate from Sulfur Containing Impurities D. I. Shvets

      • 1. Introduction

      • 2. Methods

      • 3. Results and Discussion

        • Surface's nature of aluminosilicate's sorbents

        • Nature of surface's ions also play significant role in purification process

      • 4. Conclusions

      • References

    • Titanosilicate ETS-10: Synthesis, Characterization and Adsorption for Heavy Metal Ions G. X. S. Zhao, J. L. Lee and P. A. Chia

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Methods

      • 3 Results and discussion

        • 3.1 Characterization of ETS-10 sample

        • 3.2 Adsorption kinetics of heavy metal ions on ETS-10

        • 3.3 Adsorption isotherms of heavy metal ions on ETS-10

        • 3.4 Adsorption mechanism of heavy metal ions on ETS-10

      • 4 Conclusion

      • References

    • Ordered Macroporous Materials Structurally Templated by Colloidal Microspheres Z. Zhou, W. C. Ong and G. X. S. Zhao

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Methods

        • 2.1 Synthesis of OMMS by using self-assembly strategy

        • 2.2 Synthesis of uniform-size microspheres

        • 2.3 Crystallization of the microspheres

        • 2.4 Opal annealing

        • 2.5 Opal infiltration

        • 2.6 Template removal

        • 2.7 Characterization

      • 3 Results and discussion

        • 3.1 Opal formation

        • 3.2 Opal annealing

        • 3.3 Opal infiltration and template removal

      • 4 Conclusion

      • References

    • Adsorption of Nitrogen, Oxygen and Argon in Transition and Rare Earth Ion Exchanged Zeolites A and X R. V. Jasra, J. Sebastian and C. D. Chudasama

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Methods

        • 2.1 Cation Exchange

        • 2.2 X-ray Powder Diffraction

        • 2.3 Adsorption Isotherms

        • 2.4 Heat of Adsorption

      • 3. Results

        • 3.1 The Silver exchanged Zeolites A&X

        • 3.2 Cerium & Europium Zeolite X

      • 4 Discussion

      • 5 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Adsorption of Methylene Blue from Water onto Activated Carbon Prepared from Coir Pith, an Agricultural Solid Waste C. Namasivayam andD. Kavitha

      • 1. Introduction

      • 2. Experimental

        • 2.1. Materials and Methods

      • 3. Results and discussion

        • 3.1 Effects of agitation time and concentration of dye on adsorption

        • 3.2. Adsorption dynamics

        • 3.3. Effect of adsorbent dosage

        • 3.4. Adsorption isotherms

        • 3.5. pH effect.

        • 3.6. Effect of temperature

      • 4. Conclusion

      • REFERENCE:

    • Separation of Oxygen-Argon Mixture by Pressure Swing Adsorption X. Jin and S. Farooq

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Adsorption equilibrium and kinetics in the linear range

      • 3 Comparison of kinetic selectivities

      • 4 PSA simulation

      • References

    • Dual Reflux Pressure Swing Adsorption Cycle for Gas Separation and Purification A. D. Ebner and J. A. Ritter

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Description of the process

      • 3 Model

      • 4 Discussion

      • 5 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Simulation of a Coupled Membrane/PSA Process for Gas Separation /. A. A. C. Esteves and J. P. B. Mota

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Process Description

      • 3 Theoretical Modeling

        • 3.1 Membrane Unit

        • 3.2 Pressure Swing Adsorption Unit

        • 3.3 Multicomponent Adsorption Equilibrium

      • 4 Results and Discussion

      • 5 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • 13CO and 12CO Separation on Na-LSX using Pressure-Swing Adsorption at Low Temperatures J. Izumi, N. Fukuda, N. Tomonaga, H. Tsutaya, A. Yasutake, A. Kinugasa and H. Saiki

      • Introduction

      • Experimental

        • Apparatus

        • Procedure

        • Calculation of amount adsorbed

      • Results and Discussion

        • The results of the screening test

        • CO selectivity ofNa-X

        • '3CO/nCO separation performance using pressure-swing adsorption

        • Summary

      • References

    • High Purity Oxygen Generation PSA Process by Using Carbon Molecular Sieve J.-G. Jee, T.-H. Kwon and C.-H. Lee

      • 1. Introduction

      • 2. Mathematical models

      • 3. Experimental

      • 4. Description of the PSA cycles

      • 5. Results and discussion

      • 6. Acknowledgement

      • 7. References

    • A Study on the Preparation of Deodorizing Fibers by Coating TiO2 5. W. Oh, H. J. Kim and S. M. Park

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

        • 2.1 Materials

        • 2.2 Preparations ofTiO? sol and TiO2 supported on the glass fibers

        • 2.3 Evaluation of deodorant activity

      • 3 Results and Discussion

      • 4 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Composite Adsorbents for the Removal of Cs and Sr Ions in Acidic Solutions J. K. Moon, C. H. Jung, S. H. Lee, E. H. Lee, H. T. Kim and Y. G. Shul

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 EXPERIMENTAL

      • 3 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

        • 1. Preparation of PAN Based Composite Ion Exchangers

        • 2. Chemical and Radiation Stability of the Composite Ion Exchangers

        • 3. Evaluation of Ion Exchange Performances

      • 4 CONCLUSION

      • 5 ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

      • REFERENCES

    • Dehumidification Behavior of Metal(Ti, Al, Mg) Silicates Impregnated Ceramic Fiber Sheets K 5. Ahn, C. H. Cho, Y. J. Yoo, J. S. Kim, H. S. Kim and M. H. Han

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Methods

      • 3 Results and Discussion

      • 4 Conclusion

      • 5 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Synthesis of Zirconia Colloids from Aqueous Salt Solutions and Their Applications K. Lee, P. W. Carr and A. V. McCormick

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Methods

        • 2.1 Zirconia Colloids Synthesis

        • 2.2 PICA Reaction of the Synthesized Colloids

      • 3 Results

        • 3.1 Zirconia Colloids Synthesis

        • 3.2 PICA Reaction of the Synthesized Colloids

      • 4 Discussion

        • 4.1 Zirconia Colloid Synthesis

        • 4.2 PICA Reaction of the Synthesized Colloids

      • 5 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Comparison of Nano-Sized Amphiphilic Polyurethane (APU) Particles with SDS, an Anionic Surfactant for the Soil Sorption and the Extraction of Phenanthrene from Soil I.-S. Ahn, H.-S. Choi and J.-Y. Kim

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Materials and Methods

        • 2.1 Materials

        • 2.2 Methods

          • 2.2.1 Adsorption of SDS or APU particles onto soil

          • 2.2.2 Solubilization of phenanthrene in SDS or APU solutions

          • 2.2.3 Extraction of phenanthrene sorbed in soil using APU or SDS

      • 3 Results and Discussion

      • Aknowledgements

      • References

    • Synthesis of Mesoporous Activated Carbon with Iron Ion-Aided Activation Y. Seida, K. Watanabe and Y. Nakano

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Sample preparation and characterization

      • 3 Results

      • 4 Discussion

      • 5 Conclusion

      • References

    • Separation of Peptides from Human Blood by RP-HPLC S.-K. Lee, Y. Polyakova and K.-H. Row 403

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

        • 2.1. Reagents

        • 2.2 Apparatus and method

        • 2.3. Sample preparation

      • 3 Results and Discussion

      • 4 Acknowledgements

      • 5 Reference

    • Separation of Acanthoside-D in Acanthopanax Senticosus by Preparative Recycle Chromatography S.-P. Hong,D.-X. Wang and K.-H. Row

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

        • 2.1 Reagents

        • 2.2 Apparatus and Methods

          • 2.2.1 Solvent Extraction

          • 2.2.2 Analysis of Acanthoside-D

          • 2.2.3 Preparative Recycle HPLC

      • 3 Results and Discussion

        • 3.1 Solvent Extraction

        • 3.2 Analysis of Acanthoside-D

        • 3.3 Preparative Recycle HPLC

      • 4. Conclusion

      • 5. References

    • Use of Various Forms of Kraft Lignin for Toxic Metal Uptake D. R. Crist, R. H. Crist and J. R. Martin

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Methods

      • 3 Results show uptake occurs by ion exchange with potential practical applications

        • 3.1 Recovery of DMF

        • 3.2 Structural stability in water

        • 3.3 Metal uptake is a rapid ion exchange process

        • 3.4 MLg is re-useable

        • 3.5 Batch vs. Column Operations

      • 4 Discussion

      • References

    • Removal of Uranium Ions in Sludge Waste by Electrosorption Process C.-H. Jung, J.-K. Moon, S.-H. Lee, Y.-G. Shul and W.-Z. Oh

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimentals

      • 3 Result and Discussions

      • 4 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Ion Exchange Characteristics of Palladium from a Simulated Radioactive Liquid Waste S.-H. Lee, C.-H. Jung, J.-K. Moon, J. H. Kim and H. Chung

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental method

      • 3 Results and Discussion

      • 4 Conclusions

      • References

    • Application of Characterization Procedure for Complex Mixture Adsorption in Water and Wastewater Treatment S.-H. Kim, T.-W. Kim, D.-L. Cho, D.-H. Lee and H. Moon

      • 1. Introduction

      • 2. Experiments

      • 3. Theoretical modeling

      • 4. Results and Discussion

      • 5. Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Surface Characteristics of MCM-41 on Cr(IH) and Cr(VI) Adsorption Behaviors S. J. Park, B. R. Jun and M. Han

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

        • 2.1 Synthesis of MCM-41

        • 2.2 Characterization

        • 2.3 Adsorption of Chromium

      • 3 Results and Discussion

      • 4 Conclusions

      • References

    • Influence of Anodic Oxidation of Activated Carbon Fibers on the Removal of Heavy Metal in Aqueous Solution 5. J. Park, Y. M. Kim and J. R. Lee

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

        • 2.1 Materials and Anodic oxidation

        • 2.2 Surface Functional Group

        • 2.3 Pore Structure of ACFs

        • 2.4 Adsorption Properties of Cr(VI), Cu(U), andNi(ff)

      • 3 Results and Discussion

        • 3.1 Surface Characteristics and ACFs Pore Structure

        • 3.2 The Adsorption of Heavy Metal Ion

      • 4 Conclusions

      • References

    • Kinetics and Diffusion Processes for Reactive Dye Adsorption by Dolomite 5. J. Allen, G. M. Walker, L Hansen and J.-A. Hanna

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Methods

      • 3 Results and discussion

      • Conclusions

      • 4 References

    • Permeate Flux Behavior During Microfiltration of Protein-Adsorbed Microspheres in Stirred Cell Y. Chang, S.-W. Choi, T.-G. Lee, S. Haam and W.-S. Kim

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

        • 2.1 Materials

          • 2.1.1 Proteins

          • 2.1.2 Monomers

        • 2.2. Preparation of microspheres

        • 2.3. Permeate flux Procedure

      • 3 Results and discussion

        • 3.1. Steady-state permeate flux

        • 3.2. Porosity of a cake layer

        • 3.3. Flux variation of protein-adsorbed microspheres

          • 3.3.1. Single component

          • 3.3.2. Binary Component

            • 3.3.2.1 Flux variation at pH 6.8

      • 4 Conclusion

      • Acknowledgement

      • References

    • Surface Fractional Dimensions of the Adsorbents from Industrial Sludge /. H. You, H. M. Wu and Z. X. Fang

      • l.Introduction

      • 2.Experimental

      • 3. Results and Discussion

      • 4.Conclusions

      • Reference

    • Adsorption of Acidic Peptide on Crosslinked Chitosan Fiber: Equilibria N. Kishimoto and H. Yoshida

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experiments

      • 3 Results and Discussion

      • 4 Conclusion

      • References

    • Removal of Salt and Organic Acids from Solution used to Season Salted Japanese Apricots (Ume) by Combining Electrodialysis and Adsorption W. Takatsuji and H. Yoshida

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental Section

      • 3 Result and Discussion

      • References

    • Studies on the One-Column Analogue of a Four-Zone SMB Y. S. Kim, C. H. Lee, Y. M. Koo and P. C. Wankat

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Theory

        • 2.1 Design of SMB process

        • 2.2 Mass Transfer Parameter Estimation

      • 3 One-column process

      • 4 Discussion

      • 5 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Advanced'Flue Gas Treatment by Novel de-SOx Technology over Active Carbon Fibers M.-A. Yoshikawa, A. Yasutake and I. Mochida

      • 1. Introduction

      • 2. Experimental

        • 2.1 Characteristics of ACF catalyst

        • 2.2 Desulfiirization reaction tests

      • 3. Results and Discussion

      • In the de-SOx over ACF, the reaction mechanism is considered like the following.

      • References

    • Adsorption of Natural Gas Components on Activated Carbon for Gas Storage Applications /. A. A. C. Esteves, M. S. S. Lopes, P. M. C. Nunes, M. F. J. Eusebio, A. Paiva and J. P. B. Mota

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Theory

      • 3 Experimental section

      • 4 Results and discussion

      • Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Prediction of Breakthrough Curves for Toluene and Trichloroethylene onto Activated Carbon Fiber J.-W. Park, S.-S. Lee, Y.-W. Lee and D.-K. Choi

      • 1. Introduction

      • 2. Methods

        • 2.1 Materials

        • 2.2 Fixed bed operation

      • 3. Data Handling

        • 3.1 Mechanisms and overall mass transfer coefficient

        • 3.2 Mathematical model for dynamics

      • 4. Results and Discussion

      • References

    • Catalytic Reduction Mechanism of Nitric Oxide over ACFs/Copper Catalyst 5. J. Park, B. J. Kim and Y. S. Jang

      • 1 Introductioo

      • 2 Experimental

        • 2.1 Materials and Sample Preparation

        • 2.2 Measurements

      • 3 Results and Discussion

      • 4 Conclusion

      • References

    • NO Removal of Activated Carbon Fibers Treated by Cu Electroplating S. J. Park, J. S. Shin and J. R. Lee

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

        • 2.1 Materials and Electrolytic Cu-plating

        • 2.2 XPS Analysis and ACFs Pore Structure

        • 2.3 NO Conversion Test

      • 3 Results and Discussion

        • 3.1 Surface Characteristics and ACFs Pore Structure

        • 3.2 NO Conversion

      • 4 Conclusions

      • References

    • The Appliance Study of (VPSA in the Oxygen Activated Sludge Process S. H. Lee, P. S. Yong, H. M. Moon and D. S. Park

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Theory

        • 2.1 O2- PSA Process

        • 2.2 Oxygen A cttvated Sludge Process

      • 3 Methods

        • 3.1 Oxygen Activated Sludge Pilot Plant Test

        • 3.2 O2-PSA Pilot Plant Test

      • 4 Conclusion

      • References

    • Application of Solid Adsorbent for VOC Monitoring Sensor O. J. Joung and Y. H. Kim

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

        • 2.1 Sensor Preparation

        • 2.2 Experimental Procedure

      • 3 Results and Discussion

      • 4 Conclusion

      • 5 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • PSA for Solvent Recovery with USY-Type Zeolite; an Experimental and a Simulation Study K. Chihara, T. Kaneko, T. Aikou and S. Oda

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

        • 2.1 Adsorption equilibrium

        • 2.2 Experimental procedure

      • 3 Result and Discussion

        • 3.1 Break through curves and simulation

        • 3.2 PSA operation

          • 3.2.1 Comparison between the results ofPQ- USY and EX20P

        • 3.3 PSA simulation

          • 3.3.1 Prediction of Axial Distribution

      • 4 Conclusion

    • Azeotropic Adsorption of Organic Solvent Vapor Mixture on High Silica Zeolite, Experimental & Simulation K. Chihara, K. Hijikata, H. Yamaguchi, H. Suzuki and Y. Takeuchi

      • I Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

        • 2.1 Fixed-Bed Adsorption Experiment

        • 2.2 Molecular Simulation

      • 3 Result and Discussion

        • 3.1 Breakthrough Curves

        • 3.2 Adsorption Equilibrium

      • 4 Molecular Simulation

      • 5 Conclusion

      • 6 References

    • VOC Enrichment by a VSA Process with Carbon Beds J. Yang, M. Park, J.-W. Chang and C.-H. Lee

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 VSA process models for the simulation

      • 3 Experiments

      • 4 Results and discussion

        • 4.1 Adsorption and desorption characteristics of a carbon bed.

        • 4.2 VSA process and its performance

      • 5 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Isobutane Purification by Pressure Swing Adsorption S.-S. Han, J.-H. Park, J.-N. Kim and S.-H. Cho

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Methods

        • 2.1 Adsorbents

        • 2.2 Measurements of adsorption equilibria and kinetics

        • 2.3 Purification unit and step configuration

      • 3 Results

        • 3.1 Adsorption isotherms

        • 3.2 Process performances

      • 4 Discussion

      • 5 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Characteristics of Gas Separation by Using Organic Templating Silica Membrane J. Moon, S. Hyun and C.-H. Lee

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experiment

        • Preparation of membranes

        • Adsorption Measurement

        • Membrane Permeation Measurement

      • 3. Theory and Mathematical Model

      • 4 Result and Discussion

      • 5 Conclusion

      • 6 Acknowledgements

      • 7 Reference

    • Adsorber Dynamics of Binary and Ternary Hydrogen Mixture in Activated Carbon and Zeolite 5A Beds M.-B. Kim, J.-S. Kim, C.-H. Cho and C.-H. Lee

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

      • 3 Mathematical model and simulation

      • 4 Results and discussion

      • 5 Conclusions

      • 6 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Temperature Programmed Adsorption (TPA) of Various Hydrocarbons on Adsorbers of Honeycomb Type D. J. Kim, J. E. Yie, Y. S. Oh and J. M. Kim

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

        • 2. 1 Adsorbers and hydrocarbons

        • 2.2 TPA

      • 3 Results and Discussion

      • References

    • Non-Isothermal Dynamic Adsorption and Reaction in Hydrocarbon Adsorber System D. J. Kim, W. G. Shim, J. E. Tie and H. Moon

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

      • 3 Theoretical

      • 4 Results and Discussion

      • References

    • Sorption of U(VI) onto Granite: Kinetics and Reversibility M. H. Baik and P. S. Hahn

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experiment

      • 3 Results and Discussion

        • 3.1 Kinetics

        • 3.2 Reversibility

        • 3.3 Mineralogical effect

      • 4 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Adsorption of Uranium (VI) on Kaolinite: Speciation and Mechanism M. J. Kang, B. E. Han and P. S. Hahn

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Methods

        • 2.1 Modeling of uranium speciation

        • 2.2 Experiments for precipitation or adsorption of uranium

      • 3 Results and Discussion

        • 3.1 Modeling of uranium speciation

        • 3.2 Precipitation of uranium

        • 3.3 Adsorption of uranium on kaolinite

      • References

    • High-Temperature Adsorption of Hazardous Metal Chlorides Using Activated Kaolinite H. C. Yang, J. S. Yun, Y. J. Cho and J. H. Kim

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Methods

      • 3 Results and Discussion

        • 3.1 Sorbent Structures

        • 3.2 Sorption reaction

        • 3.3 Metal uptake

      • 4 Conclusions

      • References

    • Probing the Cut-Off for Intracrystalline Adsorption on Zeolites: Pore Mouth Adsorption R. Ocakoglu, J. F. M. Denayer, J. A. Martens, G. B. Maria and G. V. Baron

      • 1 Abstract

      • 2 Introduction

      • 3 Experimental Procedures and Materials

      • 4 Results and discussion

      • 5 Conclusions

      • Acknowledgements

      • 6 References

    • The Low-Temperature Sorption Behaviour of Cryosorbent Materials C. Day and V. Hauer

      • 1 Objectives and experimental aspects

      • 2 Results

        • 2.1 Studies with nitrogen

        • 2.2 Studies with hydrogens

        • 2.3 Studies using getter material

      • 3 Conclusion and Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Thermal and Surface Mechanism Studies on Adsorption-Temperature Programmed Desorption of Nitrogen Oxides over Chemically Activated Carbon Fiber H.-J. Kim, Y.-W. Lee, E. Lee and D.-K. Choi

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental Methods

        • 1. Sample Preparation.

        • 2. Apparatus and Method.

        • 3. TPR Procedure.

        • 4. Analysis.

      • 3 Results and Discussion

      • Reference

    • Surface Properties of Activated Carbons Containing Basic Hydroxide Ions and NOx Adsorption-Desorption Process Y. W. Lee, H. J. Kim, D. K. Choi, J. W. Park, C. H. Lee and B. K. Na

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Methods

      • 3 Results and Discussion

      • 4 References

    • Adsorption Characteristics of Nitrogen Compounds on Silica Surface H. J. Kim, C.-H. Lee, Y. G. Shul and W. S. Min

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

      • 3 Results

      • 4 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Adsorption Characteristics of VOCs on Mesoporous Sorbents W. G. Shim, M. S. Yang, J. W. Lee, S. H. Suh and H. Moon

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

        • 2.1 Synthesis of mesoporous materials

        • 2.2 Measurement of mechanical stability

        • 2.3 Characterization

        • 2.4 Adsorption study

      • 3 Results and Discussion

      • 4 Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Molecular Simulation for Adsorption of Halocarbons in Zeolites K. Chihara, T. Sasaki, S. Miyamoto, M. Watanabe, C. F. Mellot-Draznieks and A. K. Cheetham

      • 1. Introduction

      • 2. Experimental

        • 2.1. Gravimetric Method

        • 2.2 Chromatographic Method [1]

        • 2.3. Simulation

          • 2.3.1 Models

      • 3. Results and Discussion

      • 4. Conclusions

      • References

    • Adsorption of BTX on MSC in Supercritical COa, a Chromatographic Study K. Chihara, N. Omi, Y. Inoue, T. Yoshida and T. Kaneko 600

      • Introduction

      • Experimental procedure and conditions

      • Result and discussion

      • Molecular simulation

      • Adsorption state

      • Adsorption isotherm

      • Conclusion

      • Reference

    • Porous Alumina with Bimodal Pore Size Distribution as an Organic Adsorbent Y. Kim, C. Kim, P. Kim, J. C. Park and J. Yi

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Experimental

      • 3 Results and discussion

        • 3.1 Synthesis of bimodal alumina with meso- and macropore

        • 3.2 Organic adsorption test

      • References

    • Storage and Selectivity of Methane and Ethane into Single- Walled Carbon Nanotubes Y.-G. Seo, B. H. Kim and N. A. Seaton

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Model and Simulation

      • 3 Results and Discussion

      • 4 Conclusions

      • 5 Acknowledgments

      • References

    • Hydrotalcites for Carbon Dioxide Adsorbents at High Temperature J. I. Yang, M. H. Jung, S.-H. Cho and J.-N. Kim

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Methods

        • 2.1 Preparation of hydrotalcites.

        • 2.2 Evaluation ofCO2 adsorbing capacity.

      • 3 Results

        • 3.1 Comparison of hydrotalcite with other C02 adsorbents at high temperature.

        • 3.2 Effect of aluminum contents.

        • 3.3 Effect of preparation methods.

        • 3.4 Effect ofK2CO3 content.

      • 4 Conclusion

      • References

    • Effect of Polarity of Polymeric Adsorbents on Desorption of VOCs under Microwave Field X. Li, Z. Li, H. X. Xi and H. Wang

      • 1. Introduction

      • 2. Principle of microwave desorption

      • 3. Experimental section

        • 3.1. Reagent and Materials

        • 3.2. Device Instrument

        • 3.3. Adsorption of VOC on Polymeric Resins

        • 3.4. Microwave and Thermal Desorption

      • 4. Results and discussion

        • 4.1 Comparison between Microwave and Thermal Regeneration

        • 4.2 Effect of different polymeric adsorbents on microwave desorption efficiency

      • 5. Conclusion

      • Acknowledgements

      • References

    • Mixed-Gas Adsorption on Heterogeneous Substrates in the Presence of Lateral AD- AD Interactions A. J. Ramirez-Pastor, F. M. Bulnes and J. L. Riccardo

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Model and Monte Carlo Simulation

      • 3 Results and discussion

      • References

    • Adsorption on Correlated Disordered Substrates R. H. Lopez, F. M. Bulnes, F. Rojas, J. L. Riccardo and G. Zgrablich

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 The heterogeneous surface

      • 3 Basic definitions and Monte Carlo simulation scheme

      • 4 Results and discussion

      • References

    • Temperature Effects on the Scaling Properties of Adsorption on Bivariate Heterogeneous Surfaces F. Roma, F. Bulnes, A. J. Ramirez-Pastor and G. Zgrablich

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Model

      • 3 Results and discussion

      • 4 Conclusions

      • References

    • Adsorption of Polyatomic Species: An Approach from Quantum Fractional Statistics /. L. Riccardo, A. J. Ramirez-Pastor and F. Roma

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 The Monolayer Adsorption Theory of Polyatomic Lattice Gases from QFS

      • 3 Monte Carlo Simulation in Grand Canonical Ensemble

      • 4 Results and Discussion

      • References

    • Multilayer Adsorption with Multisite-Occupancy F. Roma, A. J. Ramirez-Pastor and J. L. Riccardo

      • 1 Introduction

      • 2 Model and Numerical Procedure

      • 3 Monte Carlo Simulation in Grand Canonical Ensemble

      • 4 Results and Discussion

      • References

Nội dung

[...]... applications to adsorption of super and sub-critical fluids in carbonaceous materials, such as graphitid thermal carbon black and activated carbon 1 Introduction Adsorption equilibria and kinetics are important for the proper design of adsorption processes The equilibria information of adsorption isotherm is clearly the first hand information that one needs to approximately size the adsorber Since the adsorption. .. Containing Basic Hydroxide Ions and NOx Adsorption- Desorption Process X W Lee, H J Kim, D K Choi, J W Park C H Lee and B K Na 579 Adsorption Characteristics of Nitrogen Compounds on Silica Surface H J Kim, C.-H Lee, X G Shul and W S Min 584 Adsorption Characteristics of VOCs on Mesoporous Sorbents W G Shim, M S Yang, J W Lee, S H Suh and H Moon 589 Molecular Simulation for Adsorption of Halocarbons in Zeolites... High-Temperature Adsorption of Hazardous Metal Chlorides Using Activated Kaolinite H C Yang, J S Yun, E J Cho and J H Kim 559 xvi Probing the Cut-Off for Intracrystalline Adsorption on Zeolites: Pore Mouth Adsorption R Ocakoglu, J E M Denayer, J A Martens, G B Marin and G I Baron ! 564 The Low-Temperature Sorption Behaviour of Cryosorbent Materials C Day and I Hauer ! 569 Thermal and Surface Mechanism Studies on Adsorption- Temperature... vapours, it is very important that we know the value of this adsorption affinity Experimentally this information can be obtained from careful experimentation of adsorption isotherm measured from very low pressure (where adsorption affinity can be calculated) to very high pressure where saturation capacity can be determined Alternatively, the adsorption affinity can be determined from some appropriate... ETS-10: Synthesis, Characterization and Adsorption for Heavy Metal Ions G X S Zhao, J L Lee and f? A Chia 324 Ordered Macroporous Materials Structurally Templated by Colloidal Microspheres Z Zhou, ? I and G X S Zhao C Ong -? 329 Adsorption of Nitrogen, Oxygen and Argon in Transition and Rare Earth Ion Exchanged Zeolites A and X R K Jasra, J Sebastian and C D Chudasama 334 Adsorption of Methylene Blue from... Separation of Oxygen-Argon Mixture by Pressure Swing Adsorption X Jin and S Farooq 344 Dual Reflux Pressure Swing Adsorption Cycle for G s Separation a and Purification A D Ebner and J A Ritter 349 Simulation of a Coupled MembranePSA Process for Gas Separation I A A C Esteves and J I! B Mota 354 I3CO and l2C0 Separation on Na-LSX using Pressure-Swing Adsorption at Low Temperatures J Izumi, N Fukuda,... and C.-H Lee 534 Temperature Programmed Adsorption ( P A ) of Various Hydrocarbons on Adsorbers of Honeycomb Type D J Kim, J E fie, E S Oh and J M Kim 539 Non-Isothermal Dynamic Adsorption and Reaction in Hydrocarbon Adsorber System D J Kim, W G Shim, J E Yie and H Moon 544 Sorption of U(V1) onto Granite: Kinetics and Reversibility M H Baik and P S Hahn 549 Adsorption of Uranium (VI) on Kaolinite:... Infinite Dilution Selectivity Measurements by G s Chromatography a S Gumma and 0 Talu 131 Adsorption Properties of Colloid-Imprinted Carbons M Jaroniec and 2.-J L i 136 On the Role of Water in the Process of Methyl Mercaptan Adsorption on Activated Carbons S Bashkova, A Bagreev and T J Bandosz 141 Studies on the Adsorption Properties of Ion-Exchanged Low Silica X Zeolite H Jiang, W Tang, J P Zhang, B... Furuya 249 In-Situ Characterization of Ion Adsorption at Biomimetic Airwater Interfaces T E Kim, G S Lee and D J Ahn 254 Single and Multi Component Adsorption of Volatile Organic Compounds onto High Silica Zeolites - Discussion of Adsorbed Solution Theory I? Monneyron, M -H Manero and J -N Foussard 259 Influence of VOCs Molecular Characteristics on Exothermicity of Adsorption onto Activated Carbon l Pre,... Field X Li, 2 Li, H X Xi and H Wang 620 Mixed-Gas Adsorption on Heterogeneous Substrates in the Presence of Lateral AD-AD Interactions A J Ramirez-Pastor, E M Bulnes and J L Riccardo 625 xvii Adsorption on Correlated Disordered Substrates R H Lopez, E M Bulnes, E Rojas, J L Riccardo and G Zgrablich 630 Temperature Effects on the Scaling Properties of Adsorption on Bivariate Heterogeneous Surfaces E

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