Abstract

Selective removal of carbonyl sulfide (COS) and hydrogen sulfide (H2S) is the key step for natural gas desulfurization due to the highly toxic and corrosive features of these gaseous sulfides, and efficient and stable desulfurizers are urgently needed in the industry. Herein, we report a class of nitrogen-functionalized, hierarchically lamellar carbon frameworks (N-HLCF-xs), which are obtained from the structural transformation of Zn zeolitic imidazolate frameworks via controllable carbonization. The N-HLCF-xs possess the desirable characteristics of large Brunauer-Emmett-Teller surface areas (645-923 m2/g), combined primary three-dimensional microporosity and secondary two-dimensional lamellar microstructure, and high density of nitrogen base sites with enhanced pyridine ratio (17.52 wt %, 59.91%). The anchored nitrogen base sites in N-HLCF-xs show improved accessibility, which boosts their interaction with acidic COS and H2S. As expected, N-HLCF-xs can be employed as multifunctional and efficient desulfurizers for selective removal of COS and H2S from natural gas. COS was first transformed into H2S via catalytic hydrolysis, and the produced H2S was then captured and separated and catalyzed oxidation into elemental sulfur. The above continuous processes can be achieved with solo N-HLCF-xs, giving extremely high efficiencies and reusability. Their integrated desulfurization performance was better than many desulfurizers used in the area, such as activated carbon, β zeolite, MIL-101(Fe), K2CO3/γ-Al2O3, and FeOx/TiO2.

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