CO 2 Sorbents Based on Spherical Carbon and Photoactive Metal Oxides: Insight into Adsorption Capacity, Selectivity and Regenerability.
Iwona PełechEwelina Kusiak-NejmanPiotr StaciwaDaniel SiberaJoanna Kapica-KozarAgnieszka WanagFilip LatzkeKarolina PawłowskaAdrianna MichalskaUrszula NarkiewiczAntoni W MorawskiPublished in: Molecules (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
This work aimed to obtain hybrid composites based on photoactive metal oxide and carbon having adsorption properties. The materials, composed of titanium dioxide or zinc oxide and spherical carbon, were obtained from resorcinol-formaldehyde resin, treated in a solvothermal reactor heated with microwaves and then subjected to carbonization, were received. The functional groups of pure carbon spheres (unsaturated stretching C=C, stretching C-OH and C-H bending vibrations), CS/ZnO and CS/TiO 2 samples were determined by FT-IR analysis. The characteristic bands for ZnO and TiO 2 were observed below 1000 cm -1 . The thermal oxidative properties are similar for TiO 2 - and ZnO-modified carbon spheres. We have observed that the increased carbon sphere content in nanocomposites results in starting the decomposition process at a lower temperature, therefore, nanocomposites have a broader combustion temperature range. The effect of the oxides' addition to carbon spheres on their adsorption properties was evaluated in detail by examining CO 2 adsorption from the gas phase. The selectivity of CO 2 over N 2 at a temperature of 25 °C and pressure of 1 bar (a novelty in testing CS-based sorbents) calculated for 3.00 CS/TiO 2 and 4.00 CS/ZnO was 15.09 and 16.95, respectively. These nanocomposites exhibit excellent cyclic stability checked over 10 consecutive adsorption-desorption cycles.