4.7 Article

Structurally controllable hollow carbon spheres for gaseous benzene adsorption

Journal

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jece.2022.109182

Keywords

Hollow carbon sphere; Morphology; Pore structure; Gaseous benzene; Adsorption; Desorption

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In this study, a series of hollow carbon spheres (HCSs) were successfully synthesized by a simple one-pot, surfactant-free method. The HCS-11 synthesized at 10℃ exhibited the most desirable specific surface area and total pore volume, and showed high adsorption capacity for benzene. The HCS-11 also demonstrated good thermal regeneration capability and promising performance for VOC abatement.
Hollow carbon spheres (HCSs) with controllable morphology, stable physicochemical properties, high surface area, and large pore volume achieved without any acidic or alkaline activators, are likely to be an attractive adsorption material. Nevertheless, reports on applying HCSs for adsorption separation are relatively limited, especially for volatile organic compounds (VOCs). Herein, a series of HCSs were successfully synthesized by a simple one-pot, surfactant-free method and varying ethanol/water volume ratios, compositions of silicon alkoxides (tetrapropyl orthosilicate/tetraethyl orthosilicate, TPOS/TEOS), lag time for adding resorcinolformaldehyde (RF) resin precursors, and system temperatures. The differences between these HCSs in terms of average particle size, internal cavity diameter, shell thickness, specific surface area, and porosity were well elucidated. HCS-11 synthesized at 10 degrees C had the most desirable specific surface area (2531.29 m2 g-1) and total pore volume (3.527 cm3 g-1) in this study, which was superior to many HCSs in the literature, and therefore was selected for subsequent benzene adsorption/desorption tests. As expected, HCS-11 exhibited a static benzene adsorption capacity of up to 21.363 mmol g-1 at 293 K. In addition, the effects of different initial concentrations, gas flow rates, and ambient temperatures on dynamic benzene adsorption by HCS-11 were systematically investigated. The high adsorption capacity of HCS-11 remained stable after six consecutive adsorptiondesorption cycles, indicating its good thermal regeneration capability. The excellent porosity, high cyclic adsorption capacity, and rapid desorption kinetics of HCS-11 made it promising for VOC abatement.

Authors

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

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available