Abstract

Activated carbons exhibit a high grade of porosity, which together with structural stability, regenerability and cyclability makes them capable of achieving excellent hydrogen adsorption capacity. A further advantage comes from the ease of production and the use of recyclable and biocompatible materials. A simple way to produce activated carbons from amorphous cellulose involves procedures in which a pyrolysis process is combined with physical activation in CO2.We used this approach by optimizing the production process tuning the activation times. The aim is to evaluate the influence of this process parameter on the formation of the specific surface area, the pore volume and fraction of micropores with a typical size <2 nm. The influence of these structural parameters on the hydrogen adsorption properties was then evaluated. The textural and adsorption characteristics were investigated using a commercial volumetric apparatus (ASAP 2460, Micromeritics) at −196 °C and pressures between 0 and 1 bar, while the morphological properties were investigated using scanning electron microscopy.The results show that the nanostructured samples are characterized by a very high degree of ultra-microporosity (<0.7 nm) with an average pore size between 0.5 and 0.6 nm and a high specific surface area, reaching maximum values around 1500 m2/g and micropore volume up to 0.58 cc/g. These morphological characteristics strongly influence the hydrogen adsorption properties, where the molecules adsorbed reach values very close to the coverage of ideal monolayer. The synthesized activated carbon samples show a higher hydrogen adsorption capacity than similar commercial materials tested under the same thermodynamic conditions.

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