| Literature DB >> 27958305 |
Akram Alabadi1,2, Hayder A Abbood3, Qingyin Li1, Ni Jing1, Bien Tan1.
Abstract
The preparation of <span class="Chemical">nitrogenn>-doped activated <span class="Chemical">carbon (<span class="Chemical">NACs) has received significant attention because of their applications in CO2 capture and sequestration (CCS) owing to abundant nitrogen atoms on their surface and controllable pore structures by carefully controlled carbonization. We report high-surface-area porous N-doped activated carbons (NAC) by using soft-template-assisted self-assembly followed by thermal decomposition and KOH activation. The activation process was carried out under different temperature conditions (600-800 °C) using polyimine as precursor. The NAC-800 was found to have a high specific surface area (1900 m2 g-1), a desirable micropore size below 1 nm and, more importantly, a large micropore volume (0.98 cm3 g-1). NAC-800 also exhibits a significant capacity of CO2 capture i.e., over 6. 25 and 4.87 mmol g-1 at 273 K and 298 K respectively at 1.13 bar, which is one of among the highest values reported for porous carbons so far. Moreover, NAC also shows an excellent separation selectivity for CO2 over N2.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27958305 PMCID: PMC5153834 DOI: 10.1038/srep38614
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Representative schematic diagram of NACs synthesis.
Figure 2SEM images of (A) NAC-600 (B) NAC-700 (C) NAC-800 and TEM image of (D) NAC-800.
Figure 3Nitrogen adsorption (solid symbols) and desorption (open symbols) isotherms and pore size distributions of NACs, analyzed on N2 adsorption isotherms measured at 77 K using the NLDFT model.
Texture Properties, Elemental Composite and XPS Analysis Data of NACs.
| Sample | BET m2 g−1 | Pore volume cm3 g−1 | Element analysis | XPS analysis | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C% | N% | O% | C% | N% | O% | |||
| NAC-600 | 1681 | 0.80 | 85.35 | 2.16 | 11.93 | 85.32 | 2.31 | 11.24 |
| NAC-700 | 1719 | 0.85 | 88.72 | 2.07 | 9.81 | 87.11 | 2.02 | 10.18 |
| NAC-800 | 1900 | 0.98 | 90.36 | 1.73 | 6.20 | 87.62 | 1.53 | 10.23 |
Figure 4FTIR spectra (left) and Raman spectroscopy (right) showing characteristic D and G peak of NACs samples.
Figure 5XPS spectra of NACs (A) survey of NAC-800 and N1s XPS spectra of NAC-600 (B), NAC-700 (C) NAC-800 (D).
Figure 6CO2 adsorption at 273 K (left) CO2 adsorption at 298 K (right).
Figure 7Heat of adsorption of CO2 for NACs calculated by the Clausius-Clapeyron equation.
Figure 8CO2 (solid) and N2 (open) adsorption isotherms of NACs at 273 K.