Design of surface and bulk interactions: A computational approach to sustainable energy

Computational tools have proved to be effective in the search for and design of better materials for a more sustainable planet. In this thesis, we look at two specific applications in two different sectors: industrial and transportation. Separations account for around half of the energy used in the...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jana, Asmita
Other Authors: Grossman, Jeffrey C.
Format: Thesis
Published: Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2023
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/147339
_version_ 1811074658168995840
author Jana, Asmita
author2 Grossman, Jeffrey C.
author_facet Grossman, Jeffrey C.
Jana, Asmita
author_sort Jana, Asmita
collection MIT
description Computational tools have proved to be effective in the search for and design of better materials for a more sustainable planet. In this thesis, we look at two specific applications in two different sectors: industrial and transportation. Separations account for around half of the energy used in the industrial sector, and to reduce the energy used, there are efforts to convert some of the more energy intensive separation strategies like distillation to ones that use lesser energy like membrane-based technology. The first part of the thesis looks at the specific case of air or O₂/N₂ separation. Using a classical molecular dynamics (MD) framework to model gas permeation across a nanoporous graphene membrane temple, we observed increased selectivity, resulting from increasing adsorption energy differences alone. Using density functional theory calculations, we confirm that some transition metal oxides possess adsorption energies needed to operate as adsorption-based pore-flow membranes providing a suitable motivation to examine such membranes as a viable option for air separation. In the transportation sector, there have been efforts to decrease the weight of the automobiles while still retaining the strength to decrease the fuel consumption and corresponding gas exhaust. In this work, we look at carbon fibers (CFs) as a candidate material. In this work, we use MD simulations to explore the processing and chemical phase space through a framework of CF models to identify their effects on elastic performance. We find that density, followed by alignment, and functionality of the molecular constituents dictate the CF mechanical properties more strongly than their size and shape. Lastly, we propose a previously unexplored fabrication route for high-modulus CFs achieved via generating high-density CFs which leads to CFs with isometric compressive and tensile moduli, enabling their potential applications for compressive loading. Finally, using this framework and by defining a parameter that can quantify crosslinking, we demonstrate that increasing the fraction of methyl functional groups increases the crosslinking and the elastic modulus.
first_indexed 2024-09-23T09:53:18Z
format Thesis
id mit-1721.1/147339
institution Massachusetts Institute of Technology
last_indexed 2024-09-23T09:53:18Z
publishDate 2023
publisher Massachusetts Institute of Technology
record_format dspace
spelling mit-1721.1/1473392023-01-20T03:51:31Z Design of surface and bulk interactions: A computational approach to sustainable energy Jana, Asmita Grossman, Jeffrey C. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Materials Science and Engineering Computational tools have proved to be effective in the search for and design of better materials for a more sustainable planet. In this thesis, we look at two specific applications in two different sectors: industrial and transportation. Separations account for around half of the energy used in the industrial sector, and to reduce the energy used, there are efforts to convert some of the more energy intensive separation strategies like distillation to ones that use lesser energy like membrane-based technology. The first part of the thesis looks at the specific case of air or O₂/N₂ separation. Using a classical molecular dynamics (MD) framework to model gas permeation across a nanoporous graphene membrane temple, we observed increased selectivity, resulting from increasing adsorption energy differences alone. Using density functional theory calculations, we confirm that some transition metal oxides possess adsorption energies needed to operate as adsorption-based pore-flow membranes providing a suitable motivation to examine such membranes as a viable option for air separation. In the transportation sector, there have been efforts to decrease the weight of the automobiles while still retaining the strength to decrease the fuel consumption and corresponding gas exhaust. In this work, we look at carbon fibers (CFs) as a candidate material. In this work, we use MD simulations to explore the processing and chemical phase space through a framework of CF models to identify their effects on elastic performance. We find that density, followed by alignment, and functionality of the molecular constituents dictate the CF mechanical properties more strongly than their size and shape. Lastly, we propose a previously unexplored fabrication route for high-modulus CFs achieved via generating high-density CFs which leads to CFs with isometric compressive and tensile moduli, enabling their potential applications for compressive loading. Finally, using this framework and by defining a parameter that can quantify crosslinking, we demonstrate that increasing the fraction of methyl functional groups increases the crosslinking and the elastic modulus. Ph.D. 2023-01-19T18:46:33Z 2023-01-19T18:46:33Z 2022-09 2022-11-04T15:24:46.802Z Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/147339 In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted Copyright MIT http://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/ application/pdf Massachusetts Institute of Technology
spellingShingle Jana, Asmita
Design of surface and bulk interactions: A computational approach to sustainable energy
title Design of surface and bulk interactions: A computational approach to sustainable energy
title_full Design of surface and bulk interactions: A computational approach to sustainable energy
title_fullStr Design of surface and bulk interactions: A computational approach to sustainable energy
title_full_unstemmed Design of surface and bulk interactions: A computational approach to sustainable energy
title_short Design of surface and bulk interactions: A computational approach to sustainable energy
title_sort design of surface and bulk interactions a computational approach to sustainable energy
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/147339
work_keys_str_mv AT janaasmita designofsurfaceandbulkinteractionsacomputationalapproachtosustainableenergy