TY - JOUR
T1 - In-situ ion-activated carbon nanospheres with tunable ultramicroporosity for superior CO2 capture
AU - Zhang, Zhen
AU - Luo, Dan
AU - Lui, Gregory
AU - Li, Gaoran
AU - Jiang, Gaopeng
AU - Cano, Zachary Paul
AU - Deng, Ya Ping
AU - Du, Xiaojuan
AU - Yin, Song
AU - Chen, Yifei
AU - Zhang, Minhua
AU - Yan, Zifeng
AU - Chen, Zhongwei
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2019/3
Y1 - 2019/3
N2 - Ultramicroporous carbon materials play a critical role in CO2 capture and separation, however facile approaches to design ultramicroporous carbon with controllable amount, ratio and size of pores are still challenging. Herein, a novel strategy to design carbon nanospheres with abundant, uniform, and tunable ultramicroporosity was developed based on an in-situ ionic activation methodology. The adjustable ion-exchange capacity derived from oxidative functionalization was found capable of substantially governing the ionic activation and precisely regulating the ultramicroporosity in the resultant product. An ultrahigh ultramicropore content of 95.5% was achieved for the optimally-designed carbon nanospheres, which demonstrated excellent CO2 capture performances with extremely high capacities of 1.58 mmol g−1 at typical flue gas conditions and 4.30 mmol g−1 at 25 °C and ambient pressure. Beyond that, the CO2 adsorption mechanism in ultramicropore was also investigated through molecular dynamics simulation to guide the pore size optimization. This work provides a novel and facile guideline to engineer carbon materials with abundant and tunable ultramicroporosity towards superior CO2 capture performance, which also delivers great potential in extensive applications such as water purification, catalysis, and energy storage.
AB - Ultramicroporous carbon materials play a critical role in CO2 capture and separation, however facile approaches to design ultramicroporous carbon with controllable amount, ratio and size of pores are still challenging. Herein, a novel strategy to design carbon nanospheres with abundant, uniform, and tunable ultramicroporosity was developed based on an in-situ ionic activation methodology. The adjustable ion-exchange capacity derived from oxidative functionalization was found capable of substantially governing the ionic activation and precisely regulating the ultramicroporosity in the resultant product. An ultrahigh ultramicropore content of 95.5% was achieved for the optimally-designed carbon nanospheres, which demonstrated excellent CO2 capture performances with extremely high capacities of 1.58 mmol g−1 at typical flue gas conditions and 4.30 mmol g−1 at 25 °C and ambient pressure. Beyond that, the CO2 adsorption mechanism in ultramicropore was also investigated through molecular dynamics simulation to guide the pore size optimization. This work provides a novel and facile guideline to engineer carbon materials with abundant and tunable ultramicroporosity towards superior CO2 capture performance, which also delivers great potential in extensive applications such as water purification, catalysis, and energy storage.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85057153692&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.carbon.2018.10.096
DO - 10.1016/j.carbon.2018.10.096
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85057153692
SN - 0008-6223
VL - 143
SP - 531
EP - 541
JO - Carbon
JF - Carbon
ER -