4.6 Article

Templating Synthesis of Hierarchically Porous Carbon with Magnesium Salts for Electrocatalytic Reduction of 4-Nitrophenol

Journal

CATALYSTS
Volume 13, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/catal13071132

Keywords

hierarchically porous carbon; templating method; magnesium salts; electrocatalytic reduction; 4-nitrophenol

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Hierarchically porous carbon was synthesized using templating method with magnesium salts as template precursors and citric acid as carbon precursor. The carbonization process resulted in the formation of MgO particles and released gases which acted as porogens to generate pores in carbon. The resulting hierarchically porous carbon exhibited high surface oxygen functional groups and showed excellent electrocatalytic reduction performance for 4-nitrophenol.
Hierarchically porous carbon (PC) was synthesized by a templating method, using magnesium salts (Mg(HCO3)(2), MgC2O4 and MgO) as template precursors and citric acid as carbon precursor. During the carbonization process, besides the production of MgO particles, many gases (e.g., CO2/NO2/H2O) were also released and acted as a porogen to generate pores in carbon. The resulting composite (MgO@C) was subsequently treated with HCl solution to remove the MgO templates, yielding hierarchically porous carbon. The surface oxygen functional groups over porous carbon were characterized by TPD and XPS, which showed that the PC-bic, synthesized using Mg(HCO3)(2) as the template precursor, had the highest value among the PCs. As expected, the PC-bic exhibited the best performances for electrocatalytic reduction of 4-nitrophenol, with a peak current of -135.5 & mu;A at -0.679 V. The effects of 4-nitrophenol concentration, buffer solution pH and scanning rate on the electrocatalytic activities, as well as the stability of PC-bic for the reaction were investigated.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available