Polymer-Derived Silicoboron Carbonitride Foams for CO2 Capture: From Design to Application as Scaffolds for the in Situ Growth of Metal-Organic Frameworks

A template‐assisted polymer‐derived ceramic route is investigated for preparing a series of silicoboron carbonitride (Si/B/C/N) foams with a hierarchical pore size distribution and tailorable interconnected porosity. A boron‐modified polycarbosilazane was selected to impregnate monolithic silica and...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemistry : a European journal 2016-06, Vol.22 (24), p.8346-8357
Hauptverfasser: Sandra, Fabien, Depardieu, Martin, Mouline, Zineb, Vignoles, Gérard L., Iwamoto, Yuji, Miele, Philippe, Backov, Rénal, Bernard, Samuel
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A template‐assisted polymer‐derived ceramic route is investigated for preparing a series of silicoboron carbonitride (Si/B/C/N) foams with a hierarchical pore size distribution and tailorable interconnected porosity. A boron‐modified polycarbosilazane was selected to impregnate monolithic silica and carbonaceous templates and form after pyrolysis and template removal Si/B/C/N foams. By changing the hard template nature and controlling the quantity of polymer to be impregnated, controlled micropore/macropore distributions with mesoscopic cell windows are generated. Specific surface areas from 29 to 239 m2 g−1 and porosities from 51 to 77 % are achieved. These foams combine a low density with a thermal insulation and a relatively good thermostructural stability. Their particular structure allowed the in situ growth of metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) directly within the open‐cell structure. MOFs offered a microporosity feature to the resulting Si/B/C/N@MOF composite foams that allowed increasing the specific surface area to provide CO2 uptake of 2.2 %. Catch if you can: Lightweight and porous silicoboron carbonitride foams have been synthesized by a template‐assisted polymer‐derived ceramic route. By following an in situ construction strategy, metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) have been grown directly within the open‐cell structure of the foams to evaluate their potential for CO2 capture (see scheme).
ISSN:0947-6539
1521-3765
DOI:10.1002/chem.201600060