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Selective Low-Energy Carbon Dioxide Adsorption Using Monodisperse Nitrogen-Rich Hollow Carbon Submicron Spheres.

Aditya F ArifYuma KobayashiElia M SchneiderSamuel C HessRatna BalgisTakafumi IzawaHideharu IwasakiShuto TaniguchiTakashi OgiKikuo OkuyamaWendelin J Stark
Published in: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids (2017)
Monodisperse, nitrogen-doped hollow carbon spheres of submicron size were synthesized using hexamethoxymethylmelamine as both a carbon and nitrogen source in a short (1 h) microwave-assisted synthesis. After carbonization at 550 °C, porous carbon spheres with a remarkably high nitrogen content of 37.1% were obtained, which consisting mainly of highly basic pyridinic moieties. The synthesized hollow spheres exhibited high selectivity for carbon dioxide (CO2) over nitrogen and oxygen gases, with a capture capacity up to 1.56 mmol CO2 g-1. The low adsorption enthalpy of the synthesized hollow carbon spheres permits good adsorbent regeneration. Evaluation of the feasibility of scaling up shows their potential for large-scale applications.
Keyphrases
  • carbon dioxide
  • metal organic framework
  • molecularly imprinted
  • stem cells
  • aqueous solution
  • high resolution
  • solid phase extraction
  • tandem mass spectrometry