Hierarchical porous carbons are widely used as adsorbents, catalyst supports, electrode materials, and other applications because of their high specific surface area (SSA), varied pore structure, adjustable porosity, and excellent physicochemical stability. Introducing heteroatoms such as N, P, or S, with electronegativities different from that of carbon, into the carbon skeleton can change the chemical properties of the surface and the density of the electron cloud around the carbon matrix, thus altering interactions of CO2molecules with the surface and improving CO2adsorption capacity. Therefore, doping heteroatoms in carbon materials has attracted a great amount of attention. In this paper, the template method was used with F108 (polyethylene glycol–polypropylene glycolpolyethylene glycol) as the template, resorcinol and formaldehyde solutions as the carbon sources, phosphoric acid as the phosphorus source, and KOH as the activator to prepare phosphorus‐doped hierarchical porous carbons. Through a series of characterization and CO2adsorption experiments, the influence of the amount of KOH and template agent on the pore structure of carbon materials was studied. We conclude that these phosphorus‐doped hierarchical porous carbon materials are promising CO2adsorbents.
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