Porous carbons fabricated by self-template approach inherit the pore features of template, but they almost exhibit no evenly dispersed mesopores, which are significant for the diffusion-limited applications. Herein, the N-doped...
The hierarchical pore structures of carbons are significant for their properties. The template strategy is a typical pore-making approach of carbons. However, few reports on the micropore templates of porous carbons have been found. Herein, a micropore template is incorporated into a carbon precursor by adopting a post-impregnation approach for the first time, thus preparing hierarchically porous carbons. Polystyrene-b-poly-(ethylene oxide) (PS-b-PEO) micelles are used as a soft template. Poly(3-aminophenyl) boronic acid-encapsulated PS-b-PEO composite micelles are assembled on the surface of graphene oxide, forming sandwich aggregations. They are immersed in a zinc acetate solution and then directly pyrolyzed into porous carbons. During pyrolysis, the PS cores of micelles are decomposed to generate abundant mesopores, while the coordinated zinc ions are reduced to zero-valent zinc and then evaporated above its boiling temperature, creating numerous micropores. This in situ-reduced metallic zinc functions as a micropore template. The resulting carbons achieve hierarchical pore structures and a high specific surface area. As an application demonstration, they show one of the best catalytic performances for the oxygen reduction reaction among metal-free doped carbons. This post-impregnation approach can be extended to apply to numerous polar carbon precursors, thus preparing many hierarchically porous carbons with abundant micropores.
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