Corn wet distillers’
fiber (corn fiber) is a byproduct of
the corn-ethanol production process, with high potential as a precursor
for activated carbon due to its moderate nitrogen content and availability.
However, there has been limited investigation into activated carbons
from the corn fiber. In this work, we produce activated carbons from
the corn fiber using three procedures, including direct KOH activation,
hydrothermal carbonization (HTC) followed by KOH activation, and FeCl
3
-catalyzed HTC followed by KOH activation. Catalytic HTC with
FeCl
3
was found to slightly increase the degree of carbonization
relative to uncatalyzed HTC while also removing the nitrogen content
at increasing concentrations and slightly increasing the porosity.
The resulting activated carbon samples are then characterized by thermal
gravimetric analysis, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, scanning
electron microscopy, and nitrogen analysis. The two-step process resulted
in activated carbon with substantially higher surface areas than the
one-step process (1220 vs 789 m
2
/g), as well as much higher
thermal stability and nitrogen content (up to 1.20%). The results
show that the corn fiber has potential for activated carbon production,
with the two-step HTC followed by the activation process producing
more favorable material properties than direct activation.
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