Abstract

Pore distribution characteristic is one of the most crucial factors for porous adsorption materials, and the variety of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) approaches about how to simply and accurately tailor practical porous carbons for VOCs adsorption has gradually attracted attention. Here, precursors with different lignocellulose mass ratios have been used to produce porous carbon for model experiments to investigate the influence of the precursor lignocellulose contents on the pore structure and distribution characteristics of porous carbon, and the applicability of these mechanisms to real biomass materials has been further verified through bacteria-targeted bagasse decomposition: the microvolumes of ultra-micropores have decreased with decrease in cellulose contents, while mesopores have followed the reverse trend. The dynamic toluene adsorption/desorption performances of the obtained samples have been tested. The BACs-36 exhibits high toluene adsorption performance in low concentration with 635 mg/g while the BACs-48 shows excellent reusability in 10 times cycles. Based on this the balance between the adsorptive and regenerative capacities has been observed which indicates that carbon materials with abundant micropores and narrow mesopores have much better adsorption performance than porous carbon with a hierarchical pore structure, while the latter show better regeneration abilities than the former, which resulting in less desorption as a counter-acting force at the pore wall. Furthermore, the porous carbon has been shaped by one-step co-pyrolysis method using phenolic resin, which can not only maintain the hardness but also can avoid pore plugging phenomenon.

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