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Green Chemistry Centre of Excellence, University of York, York, UK
E-mail: jhc1@york.ac.uk
; Fax: +44 1904432705
; Tel: +44 1904432569
b
Max-Planck-Institut fur Kolloid- und Grenzflaechenforschung, MPI Campus Golm, Am Muehlenberg, 14476 Golm (Post: 14424 Potsdam), Deutschland
c
Departamento de Química Orgánica, Universidad de Córdoba, Edificio Marie Curie, Ctra Nnal IV, Km 396, Córdoba, Spain
E-mail: q62alsor@uco.es
; Fax: +34 957212066
; Tel: +34 957212065
Chem. Soc. Rev., 2009,38, 3401-3418
DOI:
10.1039/B822668G
Received
11 May 2009,
First published online
05 Aug 2009
Porous carbon materials are ubiquitous with a wide range of technologically important applications, including separation science, heterogeneous catalyst supports, waterpurification filters, stationary phase materials, as well as the developing future areas of energy generation and storage applications. Hard template routes to ordered mesoporous carbons are well established, but whilst offering different mesoscopic textural phases, the surface of the material is difficult to chemically post-modify and processing is energy, resource and step intensive. The production of carbon materials from biomass (i.e.sugars or polysaccharides) is a relatively new but rapidly expanding research area. In this tutorial review, we compare and contrast recently reported routes to the preparation of porous carbon materials derived from renewable resources, with examples of our previously reported mesoporous polysaccharide-derived “Starbon®” carbonaceous material technology.
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