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Dive into the research topics where Sylwester Furmaniak is active.

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Featured researches published by Sylwester Furmaniak.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2009

Can carbon surface oxidation shift the pore size distribution curve calculated from Ar, N2 and CO2 adsorption isotherms? Simulation results for a realistic carbon model

Sylwester Furmaniak; Artur P. Terzyk; Piotr A. Gauden; Peter J. F. Harris; Piotr Kowalczyk

Using the virtual porous carbon model proposed by Harris et al, we study the effect of carbon surface oxidation on the pore size distribution (PSD) curve determined from simulated Ar, N(2) and CO(2) isotherms. It is assumed that surface oxidation is not destructive for the carbon skeleton, and that all pores are accessible for studied molecules (i.e., only the effect of the change of surface chemical composition is studied). The results obtained show two important things, i.e., oxidation of the carbon surface very slightly changes the absolute porosity (calculated from the geometric method of Bhattacharya and Gubbins (BG)); however, PSD curves calculated from simulated isotherms are to a greater or lesser extent affected by the presence of surface oxides. The most reliable results are obtained from Ar adsorption data. Not only is adsorption of this adsorbate practically independent from the presence of surface oxides, but, more importantly, for this molecule one can apply the slit-like model of pores as the first approach to recover the average pore diameter of a real carbon structure. For nitrogen, the effect of carbon surface chemical composition is observed due to the quadrupole moment of this molecule, and this effect shifts the PSD curves compared to Ar. The largest differences are seen for CO(2), and it is clearly demonstrated that the PSD curves obtained from adsorption isotherms of this molecule contain artificial peaks and the average pore diameter is strongly influenced by the presence of electrostatic adsorbate-adsorbate as well as adsorbate-adsorbent interactions.


Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2013

Synergetic effect of carbon nanopore size and surface oxidation on CO2 capture from CO2/CH4 mixtures

Sylwester Furmaniak; Piotr Kowalczyk; Artur P. Terzyk; Piotr A. Gauden; Peter J. F. Harris

We have studied the synergetic effect of confinement (carbon nanopore size) and surface chemistry (the number of carbonyl groups) on CO2 capture from its mixtures with CH4 at typical operating conditions for industrial adsorptive separation (298 K and compressed CO2-CH4 mixtures). Although both confinement and surface oxidation have an impact on the efficiency of CO2/CH4 adsorptive separation at thermodynamics equilibrium, we show that surface functionalization is the most important factor in designing an efficient adsorbent for CO2 capture. Systematic Monte Carlo simulations revealed that adsorption of CH4 either pure or mixed with CO2 on oxidized nanoporous carbons is only slightly increased by the presence of functional groups (surface dipoles). In contrast, adsorption of CO2 is very sensitive to the number of carbonyl groups, which can be examined by a strong electric quadrupolar moment of CO2. Interestingly, the adsorbed amount of CH4 is strongly affected by the presence of the co-adsorbed CO2. In contrast, the CO2 uptake does not depend on the molar ratio of CH4 in the bulk mixture. The optimal carbonaceous porous adsorbent used for CO2 capture near ambient conditions should consist of narrow carbon nanopores with oxidized pore walls. Furthermore, the equilibrium separation factor was the greatest for CO2/CH4 mixtures with a low CO2 concentration. The maximum equilibrium separation factor of CO2 over CH4 of ~18-20 is theoretically predicted for strongly oxidized nanoporous carbons. Our findings call for a review of the standard uncharged model of carbonaceous materials used for the modeling of the adsorption separation processes of gas mixtures containing CO2 (and other molecules with strong electric quadrupolar moment or dipole moment).


Adsorption Science & Technology | 2009

Fullerene-Intercalated Graphene Nano-Containers — Mechanism of Argon Adsorption and High-Pressure CH4 and CO2 Storage Capacities

Artur P. Terzyk; Sylwester Furmaniak; Piotr A. Gauden; Piotr Kowalczyk

Using GCMC simulations, we discuss the mechanism of argon adsorption onto intercalated graphene nano-containers (NanoBuds). The mechanism is related to the shapes of the high-resolution αS-plots. Next, we have tested the applicability of these materials to the storage of methane and carbon dioxide. We show that intercalation improves the storage, especially in the range of low pressures where the effect of volume does not dominate. The results obtained may be of interest in the design of new carbon materials.


Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2011

Phenol adsorption on closed carbon nanotubes.

Agnieszka Pacholczyk; Artur P. Terzyk; Marek Wiśniewski; Piotr A. Gauden; Radosław P. Wesołowski; Sylwester Furmaniak; Aleksandra Szcześ; Emil Chibowski; Bartosz Kruszka

We present the results of systematic studies of phenol adsorption on closed commercially available, unmodified carbon nanotubes. Phenol adsorption is determined by the value of tube-specific surface area, the presence of small amount of surface groups influence adsorption only in very small amount. Phenol can be applied as a probe molecule for comparative analysis of tube surface areas. Tube curvature influences adsorption from solution, i.e., we observe increasing adsorption energy (and slower desorption process) with the decrease in tube curvature. This is in full accordance with molecular simulation results.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2009

Ar, CCl4 and C6H6 adsorption outside and inside of the bundles of multi-walled carbon nanotubes—simulation study

Sylwester Furmaniak; Artur P. Terzyk; Piotr A. Gauden; Radosław P. Wesołowski; Piotr Kowalczyk

This is the first paper reporting the results of systematic study of the adsorption of Ar, C(6)H(6) and CCl(4) on the bundles of closed and opened multi-walled carbon nanotubes. Using grand canonical Monte Carlo (GCMC) and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, we also study the effect of the introducing defects in the external and internal walls of osculating and separated nanotubes on Ar diffusion and on adsorption of all three adsorbates. The Ar diffusion coefficients obtained are very sensitive to the presence of defects. Simulated isotherms are discussed to show the relation between the shapes of the high resolution alpha(s)-plots and the mechanisms of adsorption. From obtained data, as well as from geometric considerations, from the VEGA ZZ package, and from simulations (ASA), the values of surface areas of all nanotubes are calculated and compared with those obtained using the most popular adsorption methods (BET, alpha(s) and the A,B,C-points). We show that the adsorption value for the C-point of the isotherm should be taken for the calculation of the specific surface area of carbon nanotubes to obtain a value which approaches the absolute geometric surface area. A fully packed monolayer is not created at the A-, B- or C-points of the isotherm; however, the number of molecules adsorbed at the latter point is closest to the number of molecules in the monolayer as calculated via the ASA method, the VEGA ZZ package or from geometric considerations.


Advances in Condensed Matter Physics | 2015

The Chemistry of Bioconjugation in Nanoparticles-Based Drug Delivery System

Karolina Werengowska-Ciećwierz; Marek Wiśniewski; Artur P. Terzyk; Sylwester Furmaniak

Nanomedicine is, generally, the application of nanotechnology to medicine. The term nanomedicine includes monitoring, construction of novel drug delivery systems, and any possible future applications of nanotechnology and nanovaccinology. In this review, the most important ligand-nanocarrier and drug-nanocarrier bioconjugations are described. The detailed characterizations of covalently formed bonds between targeted ligand and nanocarrier, including amide, thioether, disulfide, acetyl-hydrazone and polycyclic groups, are described. Also, the coupling of small elements and heteroatoms in the form of R-X-R the “click chemistry” groups is shown. Physical adsorption and chemical bonding of drug to nanocarrier surface involving drug on the internal or external surfaces of nanocarriers are described throughout possibility of the formation of the above-mentioned functionalities. Moreover, the most popular nanostructures (liposomes, micelles, polymeric nanoparticles, dendrimers, carbon nanotubes, and nanohorns) are characterized as nanocarriers. Building of modern drug carrier is a new method which could be effectively applied in targeted anticancer therapy.


Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2008

Carbon surface chemical composition in para-nitrophenol adsorption determined under real oxic and anoxic conditions

Artur P. Terzyk; Marek Wiśniewski; Piotr A. Gauden; Gerhard Rychlicki; Sylwester Furmaniak

A series of commercial unmodified and modified activated carbons was studied. The surface chemical composition was characterized using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and Boehm titration methods. Data on p-nitrophenol (pnp) adsorption isotherms determined under real oxic and anoxic conditions (at 310 K) are presented and described using bimodal Langmuir and lattice density functional theory models. The applicability of the pnp molecule for determination of surface area using adsorption from solution data is discussed. It is shown that under anoxic conditions adsorption and relative enthalpy of this process depend on the value of BET apparent surface area and DA micropore volumes. The differences between adsorption levels under both conditions increase with rise in solute equilibrium concentration. Moreover, the average difference between adsorption values under both conditions increases and next decreases with rise in the concentration of surface acidic groups. Applying quantum chemical calculations, we show that under anoxic conditions the influence of surface oxygen groups on pnp adsorption is small, whereas under oxic conditions the reverse situation is observed. Obtained theoretical results show very good correspondence to the experimental data and the origin of the relationships observed experimentally is explained and discussed.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2013

Separation of CO2-CH4 mixtures on defective single walled carbon nanohorns - tip does matter

Sylwester Furmaniak; Artur P. Terzyk; Piotr Kowalczyk; Katsumi Kaneko; Piotr A. Gauden

Using realistic models of single-walled carbon nanohorns and their single-walled carbon nanotube counterparts, we study the equilibrium separation of CO2-CH4 mixtures near ambient operating conditions by using molecular simulations. We show that regardless of the studied operating conditions (i.e., total CO2-CH4 mixture pressures and mole fractions of mixture components in the bulk phase), single-walled carbon nanohorns maximize the CO2-CH4 equilibrium separation factor. Optimized samples of single-walled carbon nanohorns consisting of narrow tubular parts capped with horn-shaped tips show highly selective adsorption of CO2 over the CH4 mixture component, with the CO2-CH4 equilibrium separation factor of ~8-12. A large surface-to-volume ratio (i.e., enhanced surface forces) and unique defective morphology (i.e., packing of adsorbed molecules in quasi-one/quasi-zero dimensional nanospaces) of single-walled carbon nanohorns are their key structural properties responsible for the excellent separation performance. Our theoretical simulation results are in quantitative agreement with a recent experimental/theoretical study of the CO2-CH4 adsorption and separation on oxidized single-walled carbon nanohorns [Ohba et al., Chem. Lett., 40, 2011, 1089]. Both experiment and theory showed that the CO2-CH4 equilibrium separation factor of oxidized samples of single-walled nanohorns measured near ambient operating conditions is ~2-5. This reduction in the separation efficiency as compared to optimized samples of single-walled carbon nanohorns is theoretically justified by their lower surface-to-volume ratio (i.e., larger diameters of tubular parts and horn-shaped tips).


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2011

Molecular dynamics of zigzag single walled carbon nanotube immersion in water

Piotr A. Gauden; Artur P. Terzyk; Rafał Pieńkowski; Sylwester Furmaniak; Radosław P. Wesołowski; Piotr Kowalczyk

The results of enthalpy of immersion in water for finite single-walled carbon nanotubes are reported. Using molecular dynamics simulation, we discuss the relation between the value of this enthalpy and tube diameters showing that the obtained plot can be divided into three regions. The structure of water inside tubes in all three regions is discussed and it is shown that the existence of the strong maximum of enthalpy observed for tube diameter ca. 1.17 nm is due to freezing of water under confinement. The calculations of hydrogen bond statistics and water density profiles inside tubes are additionally reported to confirm the obtained results. Next, we show the results of calculation for the same tubes but containing surface carbonyl oxygen groups at pore entrances. A remarkable rise in the value of enthalpy of immersion in comparison to the initial tubes is observed. We also discuss the influence of charge distribution between oxygen and carbon atom forming surface carbonyls on the structure of confined water. It is concluded for the first time that the presence of surface oxygen atoms at the pore entrances remarkably influences the structure and stability of ice created inside nanotubes, and surface carbonyls appear to be chaotropic (i.e. structure breaking) for confined water. This effect is explained by the pore blocking leading to a decrease (compared to initial structure) in the number of confined water molecules after introduction of surface oxygen groups at pore entrances.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2015

Nuclear Quantum Effects in the Layering and Diffusion of Hydrogen Isotopes in Carbon Nanotubes

Piotr Kowalczyk; Artur P. Terzyk; Piotr A. Gauden; Sylwester Furmaniak; Katsumi Kaneko; Thomas F. Miller

Although recent experimental studies have demonstrated that H2 and D2 molecules wet the inner surface of supergrowth carbon nanotubes at low temperatures, characterization of the structural and dynamical properties in this regime is challenging. This Letter presents a theoretical study of self-diffusion in pure and binary H2, D2, and T2 contact monolayer films formed on the inner surface of a carbon nanotube. Our results show that monolayer formation and self-diffusion both in pure hydrogen isotopes and in H2/T2 and H2/D2 isotope mixtures is impacted by nuclear quantum effects, suggesting potential applications of carbon nanotubes for the separation of hydrogen isotopes.

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Piotr A. Gauden

Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń

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Artur P. Terzyk

Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń

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Piotr Kowalczyk

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Piotr Kowalczyk

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Marek Wiśniewski

Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń

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Piotr Kowalczyk

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Gerhard Rychlicki

Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń

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Piotr Kowalczyk

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Radosław P. Wesołowski

Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń

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