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Evolution of Phosphorus-Containing Groups on Activated Carbons during Heat Treatment.

Yongfang WangSonglin ZuoJianxiao YangSeong-Ho Yoon
Published in: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids (2017)
Two types of activated carbons have been prepared by H3PO4 activation of lignocellulose and by H3PO4 modification of activated carbon, and then heat-treated at temperatures from 400 to 900 °C in an atmosphere of N2 or H2 to investigate the evolution of phosphorus-containing groups. Elemental analysis, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, 31P nuclear magnetic resonance, nitrogen adsorption, and scanning electron microscopy have been used to analyze the physicochemical properties of the activated carbons. The results show that C-O-P linkages of phosphorus-containing groups can progressively evolve into C-P-O, C3-P═O, C3-P, and eventually elemental phosphorus as a result of heat treatment. Phosphate-like groups are much more thermally stable in an N2 than in an H2 atmosphere. In N2, C-O-P linkages significantly evolve into C-P-O and C3-P═O at up to 800 °C, whereas C3-P linkages are not formed even at 900 °C. In H2, the corresponding evolution remarkably occurs at 500 °C, forming C3-P linkages and eventually elemental phosphorus. Moreover, the two activated carbons exhibit different evolution trends, suggesting that the evolution happens more easily for phosphorus-containing groups located on the edges of graphite-like crystallites than those in the lattice. Finally, we propose different evolution pathways of phosphorus-containing groups upon heat treatment in N2 and H2 atmospheres.
Keyphrases
  • sewage sludge
  • magnetic resonance
  • electron microscopy
  • heat stress
  • high resolution
  • computed tomography
  • mass spectrometry
  • single molecule