Molecular simulations for hydrogen physisorption with corannulene molecules arranged according to their crystal structure result in good agreement with the weight-percent hydrogen stored as determined experimentally employing a 3-g sample of highly crystalline corannulene at ambient temperatures and 72 bar of pressure. Calculated enthalpies of adsorption for corannulene/hydrogen molecular systems obtained from ab initio calculations which take into account electron correlation via second-order Möller-Plesset perturbation theory are in good agreement with literature experimental enthalpies of adsorption for activated carbons interacting with molecular hydrogen. Ab initio results also show that corannulene molecules arranged in a sandwich structure are important for approximately doubling the binding energy of corannulene interacting with molecular hydrogen through a cooperative interaction. To test the effects of finite temperatures and pressures, stack arrays were used as input for molecular dynamics simulations and indicate that physisorption mechanisms including van der Waals forces and dipole-induced dipole interactions may yield enhanced adsorption capacity in relation to other carbon-based materials. These results will be instrumental in identifying interlayer separations of an array of corannulene or related molecules that may provide a high weight percent of physisorbed hydrogen.
Density functional theory and classical molecular dynamics simulations are used to investigate the prospect of lithium-doped corannulene as adsorbent material for H(2) gas. Potential energy surface scans at the level of B3LYP/6-311G(d,p) show an enhanced interaction of molecular hydrogen with lithium-atom-doped corannulene complexes with respect to that found in undoped corannulene. MP2(FC)/6-31G(d,p) optimizations of 4H(2)-(Li(2)-C(20)H(10)) yield H(2) binding energies of -1.48 kcal/mol for the H(2)-Li interaction and -0.92 kcal/mol for the H(2)-C interaction, whereas values of -0.94 and -0.83 kcal/mol were reported (J. Phys. Chem. B 2006, 110, 7688-7694) for physisorption of H(2) on the concave and the convex side of corannulene using MP2(full)/6-31G(d), respectively. Classical molecular dynamics simulations predict hydrogen uptakes in Li-doped corannulene assemblies that are significantly enhanced with respect to that found in undoped molecules, and the hydrogen uptake ability is dependent on the concentration of lithium dopant. For the Li(6)-C(20)H(10) complex, a hydrogen uptake of 4.58 wt % at 300 K and 230 bar is obtained when the adsorbent molecules are arranged in stack configurations separated by 6.5 A, and with interlayer distances of 10 A, hydrogen uptake reaches 6.5 wt % at 300 K and 215 bar.
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