Granular Activated Carbon Sound Absorption Predictions Made using Measured Material Parameters (original) (raw)
- Huawei Yang, Institute of Acoustics, Chinese Academy of Sciences
- Tongyang Shi, Institute of Acoustics, Chinese Academy of ScienceFollow
- Guochenhao Song, Purdue UniversityFollow
- J Stuart Bolton, Purdue UniversityFollow
Abstract
Granular Activated Carbon (GAC) is hierarchical porosity material that yields better in low frequency sound absorption performance compared with many traditional porous materials due to the sorption effect created by nanometer-scale pores within the particles. In 2017, a triple porosity model accounting for the sorption effect in the micropores was proposed by Venegas et al. In the proposed model, some of input parameters (i.e., mesopore size and micropore effective diffusion coefficient) were fitted by matching the model to measured the surface impedance of a GAC stack; however, some fitted values are questionable from an inorganic material perspective. In the present work, the GAC material parameters, such as micro- and meso-pore size, were estimated from a standard isotherm measurement. The measurement results showed a standard Langmuir type isotherm behavior at different temperatures: i.e., 273.15K and 293.15K. Thus, if the isotherms can be described with the Langmuir model, then the Langmuir constant and heat of adsorption can be estimated based on the isotherms. Finally, these parameters were used as the input to the GAC model and the absorption coefficient was calculated. The calculated result was also compared with the absorption coefficient measured following the E1050 standard.
Keywords
Activated carbon, Granules, Sound absorption, Hierarchical porosity, Langmuir constant
Subject
Acoustics and Noise Control
Date of this Version
5-13-2024
Recommended Citation
Yang, Huawei; Shi, Tongyang; Song, Guochenhao; and Bolton, J Stuart, "Granular Activated Carbon Sound Absorption Predictions Made using Measured Material Parameters" (2024). Publications of the Ray W. Herrick Laboratories. Paper 284.
https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/herrick/284
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