Effect of the porous structure in carbon materials for CO2 capture at atmospheric and high-pressure
Activated carbons prepared from petroleum pitch and using KOH as activating agent exhibit an excellent behavior in CO2 capture both at atmospheric (∼168mgCO2/g at 298K) and high pressure (∼1500mgCO2/g at 298K and 4.5MPa). However, an exhaustive evaluation of the adsorption process shows that the opt...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Carbon (New York) 2014-02, Vol.67, p.230-235 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Activated carbons prepared from petroleum pitch and using KOH as activating agent exhibit an excellent behavior in CO2 capture both at atmospheric (∼168mgCO2/g at 298K) and high pressure (∼1500mgCO2/g at 298K and 4.5MPa). However, an exhaustive evaluation of the adsorption process shows that the optimum carbon structure, in terms of adsorption capacity, depends on the final application. Whereas narrow micropores (pores below 0.6nm) govern the sorption behavior at 0.1MPa, large micropores/small mesopores (pores below 2.0–3.0nm) govern the sorption behavior at high pressure (4.5MPa). Consequently, an optimum sorbent exhibiting a high working capacity for high pressure applications, e.g., pressure-swing adsorption units, will require a poorly-developed narrow microporous structure together with a highly-developed wide microporous and small mesoporous network. The appropriate design of the preparation conditions gives rise to carbon materials with an extremely high delivery capacity ∼1388mgCO2/g between 4.5MPa and 0.1MPa. Consequently, this study provides guidelines for the design of carbon materials with an improved ability to remove carbon dioxide from the environment at atmospheric and high pressure. |
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ISSN: | 0008-6223 1873-3891 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.carbon.2013.09.086 |