4.6 Article

Nitrogen and Oxygen Codoped Porous Carbon with Superior CO2 Adsorption Performance: A Combined Experimental and DFT Calculation Study

Journal

INDUSTRIAL & ENGINEERING CHEMISTRY RESEARCH
Volume 58, Issue 29, Pages 13390-13400

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.iecr.9b01454

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2018YFB0605401]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21868025]
  3. National First-rate Discipline Construction Project of Ningxia [NXYLXK2017A04]
  4. Major Program of Key Research and Development Program of Ningxia Province, China [2018BCE01002]
  5. Key Research and Development Program of Ningxia Province, China [2016BY005]

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Nitrogen and oxygen codoped porous carbons (NOCKs) were obtained by nitrogenization, preoxidation, and chemical activation. Considering the activation reagent amount and modification temperature, the pore structure conducive to CO2 adsorption was obtained. NOCK-400-1 exhibits maximum CO2 capacity of 6.77 mmol g(-1) at 0 degrees C and 4.46 mmol g(-1) at 25 degrees C, 1 bar. It also presents high dynamic CO2 adsorption capacity under 15% CO2/85% N-2 at ambient temperature and excellent adsorption regenerability. The results show that the improvement of CO2 adsorption performance is mainly due to the synergistic effect of codoping nitrogen and oxygen. The codoping method effectively improves the relative contents of pyrrolic-N, pyridinic-N, and phenolic hydroxyl with promoting the synthesis of amorphous carbon. Furthermore, the codoping method enhances the porosity of NOCKs with less consumption of KOH. The density functional theory (DFT) calculations also demonstrate two kinds of van der Waals actions (namely, dispersion interaction and electrostatic attraction) for CO2 adsorption on the nitrogen and oxygen codoped carbon surface. Additionally, the physical adsorption mechanism on the heterogeneous surface of adsorbents is confirmed by adsorption isotherm and thermodynamic study. Therefore, nitrogen and oxygen codoped porous carbons are a promising sorbent for CO2 capture, which provides the effective information for carbon design.

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