4.8 Article

Heteroatom-Doped Porous Carbons as Effective Adsorbers for Toxic Industrial Gasses

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 14, Issue 29, Pages 33173-33180

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.2c06556

Keywords

toxic gas adsorption; nitrogen-doped porous carbons; ammonia capture; sulfur dioxide capture; porous adsorbent

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Materials Sciences and Engineering [DE-SC0002576]
  2. Defense Threat Reduction Agency [HDTRA1-19- 1-0010]

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An advanced carbon material with exceptional adsorption capacity for NH3 and SO2 gases has been designed and tested in this study. The nitrogen-doped carbon materials showed excellent gas uptake and release under practical conditions, surpassing most reported porous materials and metal organic frameworks. The materials also demonstrated good recyclability and maintained their initial gas uptake capacity, highlighting their potential for practical applications.
Ammonia (NH3), often stored in large quantities before being used in the production of fertilizer, and sulfur dioxide (SO2), a byproduct of fossil fuel consumption, particularly the burning of coal, are highly toxic and corrosive gases that pose a significant danger to humans if accidentally released. Therefore, developing advanced materials to enable their effective capture and safe storage is highly desired. Herein, advanced benzimidazole-derived carbons (BIDCs) with an exceptional capacity for NH3 and SO2 have been designed and tested. These heteroatom-doped porous carbon adsorbents were synthesized by thermolysis of imidazolate-potassium salts affording high surface area and controlled heteroatom content to optimize for rapid NH3 and SO2 gas uptake and release under practical conditions. According to gas uptake measurements, these nitrogen-doped carbons exhibit exceptional gas adsorption capacity, with BIDC-3-800 adsorbing 21.42 mmol/g SO2 at 298 K and 1 bar, exceeding most reported porous materials and BIDC-2-700 adsorbing 14.26 mmol/g NH(3 )under the same conditions. The NH3 uptake of BIDC-2-700 surpassed reported activated carbons and is among the best adsorbents including metal organic frameworks (MOFs). Our synthetic method allows for control over both textural and chemical properties of the carbon and enables heteroatom functionality to be incorporated directly into the carbon framework without the need for postsynthetic modification. These materials were also tested for recyclability; all adsorbents showed almost complete retention of their initial gas uptake capacity during recyclability studies and maintained their structural integrity and their previous adsorption capacity of both NH3 and SO2, highlighting their potential for practical application.

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