Abstract

This work investigates the interplay of carbonization temperature and the chemical composition of carbon microfibers (CMFs), and their impact on the equilibration time and adsorption of three molecules (N2, CO2, and CH4). PAN derived CMFs were synthesized by electrospinning and calcined at three distinct temperatures (600, 700 and 800 °C), which led to samples with different textural and chemical properties assessed by FTIR, TGA/DTA, XRD, Raman, TEM, XPS, and N2 adsorption. We examine why samples calcined at low/moderate temperatures (600 and 700 °C) show an open hysteresis loop in nitrogen adsorption/desorption isotherms at −196.15 °C. The equilibrium time in adsorption measurements is nearly the same for these samples, despite their distinct chemical compositions. Increasing the equilibrium time did not allow for the closure of the hysteresis loop, but by rising the analysis temperature this was achieved. By means of the isosteric enthalpy of adsorption measurements and ab initio calculations, adsorbent/adsorbate interactions for CO2, CH4 and N2 were found to be inversely proportional to the temperature of carbonization of the samples (CMF-600 > CMF-700 > CMF-800). The enhancement of adsorbent/adsorbate interaction at lower carbonization temperatures is directly related to the presence of nitrogen and oxygen functional groups on the surface of CMFs. Nonetheless, a higher concentration of heteroatoms also causes: (i) a reduction in the adsorption capacity of CO2 and CH4 and (ii) open hysteresis loops in N2 adsorption at cryogenic temperatures. Therefore, the calcination of PAN derived microfibers at temperatures above 800 °C is recommended, which results in materials with suitable micropore volume and a low content of surface heteroatoms, leading to high CO2 uptake while keeping acceptable selectivity with regards to CH4 and moderate adsorption enthalpies.

Highlights

  • IntroductionSpecific surface area is one of the parameters of interest

  • The nitrogen adsorption/desorption technique is ordinarily employed for the textural characterization of diverse materials synthesized to be used as CO2 or CH4 adsorbents.Specific surface area is one of the parameters of interest

  • In addition to evaluating the impact of equilibration time on the open hysteresis loop in carbon microfibers, we studied the effect of chemical composition

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Summary

Introduction

Specific surface area is one of the parameters of interest. Most of these materials require heat treatment to remove undesired species from the precursors used for their synthesis. There are some possible reasons why this occurs [5,6,7]: (i) a nonrigid structure of carbon microfibers (CMFs) that causes deformation by adsorption or pore filling, (ii) trapped nitrogen cannot be released because of its affinity for the heterogeneous surface of the CMFs, i.e., the adsorption potential of the pore wall traps the nitrogen molecules, (iii) the existence of ink-bottle pores [6], (iv) the equilibration time during the adsorption/desorption analysis, or (v) a chemical composition with possible residues of small amounts of the precursor polymer.

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