(545e) Finite Element Modeling of Atmospheric Water Extraction By Way of Highly Porous Adsorbents: A Roadmap for Solver Construction with Model Factor Sensitivity Screening | AIChE

(545e) Finite Element Modeling of Atmospheric Water Extraction By Way of Highly Porous Adsorbents: A Roadmap for Solver Construction with Model Factor Sensitivity Screening

A Finite Element Model (FEM) is developed for use in determining adsorption system performance. The model is intended to guide novel adsorbent structure fabrication and atmospheric water harvesting device design. We survey a variety of governing equation factor inputs and relationships which describe the interaction between Zeolite 13X and water vapor. Mitigation strategies are discussed for detecting the breakdown of continuum modeling at micro scales wherein Knudsen effects and other anomalous behaviors emerge. Characterization of model factor inputs and the techniques for their sourcing is described with consideration to the construction of a high throughput multi-scale shape optimized computational schema. Four objectives guided the development of this model. Our first objective was to understand the implementation of adsorption systems equations and the assumptions that could prevent reliable predictability. The second objective was to assemble, reduce, and analyze model constants and approximations that express FEM coefficient calculations as physical forces and thermodynamic properties which could be derived from other computational methods. Third, to analyze factor sensitivity of model inputs by way of a $2^k$ factorial screening to determine which inputs are driving the physics of water harvesting adsorption systems. The fourth objective was to design the FEM solver for integration into a multi-scale high throughput topologically optimized schema. The main finding of the solver factor screening indicate that total micropore volume is highest value characteristics in relation to water uptake.