Abstract

Walnut shell is a very potential biochar precursor because of its wide source, low cost, and easy structure modification. In this paper, the co-activation method of FeCl3, ZnCl2 and H2O(g) was adopted to prepare walnut shell-based biochar with high microporosity and the effect of pore structure on CO2 adsorption performance at different temperatures was investigated. The prepared biochar had a larger specific surface area (2647.8 m2 g−1), satisfactory micropore area (2008.7 m2 g−1) and high total pore volume (2.58 cm3 g−1). At 273 K and 298 K, its CO2 adsorption capacity was 4.79 mmol g−1 and 3.20 mmol g−1, respectively. Particularly, CO2 adsorbed uptake on biochar was strongly sensitive to their narrow micropore volume, instead of the total specific surface area, total pore volume, and micropore specific surface area. The optimal pore size beneficial for CO2 adsorption was 0.33–0.82 nm at 273 K, but the optimal pore size was 0.33–0.39 nm at 298 K. It provides theoretical guidance for future material preparation and selection, and FeCl3, ZnCl2 and H2O(g) may be effective biochar activators.

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