2019
DOI: 10.3390/pr7110801
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Effect of Ammonia Activation and Chemical Vapor Deposition on the Physicochemical Structure of Activated Carbons for CO2 Adsorption

Abstract: Focusing on the bottlenecks of traditional physical activation method for the preparation of activated carbons (ACs), we established a simple and scalable method to control the physicochemical structure of ACs and study their CO2 adsorption performance. The preparation is achieved by ammonia activation at different volume fractions of ammonia in the mixture (10%, 25%, 50%, 75%, and 100%) to introduce the nitrogen-containing functional groups and form the original pores and subsequent chemical vapor deposition … Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…AC can be comprised of various functional groups such as carboxylic acid, phenolic and lactone groups, 190 but they also may be imparted through treatments with ammonia, nitric acid, metal hydroxides etc . 189 For CO 2 adsorption specifically, the introduction of nitrogen 191 and oxygen 192 functional groups are known to enhance the adsorption. Both elements are more electronegative than the surrounding carbon and can pull electrons to increase the polarity and attract CO 2 molecules 192 through dipole–dipole forces, as shown by the red hashed bonds in Fig.…”
Section: Applications Of Plastic Derived Acmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…AC can be comprised of various functional groups such as carboxylic acid, phenolic and lactone groups, 190 but they also may be imparted through treatments with ammonia, nitric acid, metal hydroxides etc . 189 For CO 2 adsorption specifically, the introduction of nitrogen 191 and oxygen 192 functional groups are known to enhance the adsorption. Both elements are more electronegative than the surrounding carbon and can pull electrons to increase the polarity and attract CO 2 molecules 192 through dipole–dipole forces, as shown by the red hashed bonds in Fig.…”
Section: Applications Of Plastic Derived Acmentioning
confidence: 99%