Encyclopedia of Membrane Science and Technology 2013
DOI: 10.1002/9781118522318.emst101
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Gas Transport in Dense Polymeric Membranes, Molecular Dynamics Simulations

Abstract: Classical simulations such as molecular dynamics (MD) are powerful tools to either complement experimental evidence or to predict gas transport properties in polymers. They can reproduce the gas uptake curves and characterize at the molecular level both the mechanisms of gas mobility and the structural and dynamical changes of the matrices. It is also possible to evaluate the gas diffusion and solubility coefficients, thus leading to model permeabilities. However, realistic fully atomistic simulations are curr… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…During the last decade, atomistic modeling using molecular dynamics (MD) [1,2] has become an efficient tool for the elucidation and prediction of various properties of polymers and, in particular, potential and applicable materials for gas and vapor separation membranes. Free volume and size distribution of free volume elements (FVEs) [3][4][5][6], energy barriers of inner rotation of the main chains [4,7,8], gas diffusion, solubility and permeability coefficients in polymers [3,5,7,9], gas and vapor sorption isotherms [10][11][12] can all be evaluated and predicted by MD in polymers with various chemical structures.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…During the last decade, atomistic modeling using molecular dynamics (MD) [1,2] has become an efficient tool for the elucidation and prediction of various properties of polymers and, in particular, potential and applicable materials for gas and vapor separation membranes. Free volume and size distribution of free volume elements (FVEs) [3][4][5][6], energy barriers of inner rotation of the main chains [4,7,8], gas diffusion, solubility and permeability coefficients in polymers [3,5,7,9], gas and vapor sorption isotherms [10][11][12] can all be evaluated and predicted by MD in polymers with various chemical structures.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Now, the diffusion coefficient ( D ) can be estimated from MD simulations using Eqn (1), where t is the simulation time and the term in the angled brackets is known as the mean squared displacement (MSD): D=16trit+t0r0t02 …”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2 MD simulations are now widely and routinely applied in fields ranging from packaging to materials science, biophysics, biosensor fabrication, reverse osmosis and gas separation. 3 Now, the diffusion coefficient (D) can be estimated from MD simulations using Eqn (1), where t is the simulation time and the term in the angled brackets is known as the mean squared displacement (MSD) [4][5][6][7] :…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In molecular simulations of dense matrices, the free-volume or voidspace can be characterized using different techniques [23,43,90,91]. A simple geometric approach is the percentage of probe-accessible volume, %PAV, which is obtained by repeated random trial insertions of a virtual spherical probe of predefined radius [92].…”
Section: Free-volume Morphologymentioning
confidence: 99%